2011年6月28日 星期二

An update on Google Health and Google PowerMeter

An update on Google Health and Google PowerMeter

6/24/2011 11:01:00 AM
In the coming months, we’re going to retire two products that didn’t catch on the way we would have hoped, but did serve as influential models: Google Health (retiring January 1, 2012; data available for download through January 1, 2013) and Google PowerMeter (retiring September 16, 2011). Both were based on the idea that with more and better information, people can make smarter choices, whether in regard to managing personal health and wellness, or saving money and conserving energy at home. While they didn't scale as we had hoped, we believe they did highlight the importance of access to information in areas where it’s traditionally been difficult.

We’re making this announcement well in advance to give you plenty of time to download the information you might have stored in either product or to transfer it to another service, and we’re making it easy for you to do it in a variety of formats. More on how that works below.

More broadly, we remain committed as always to helping people around the world access and use information pertinent to them. We’ll continue to pursue this goal and to encourage government and industry to do the same.

Google Health
When we launched Google Health, our goal was to create a service that would give people access to their personal health and wellness information. We wanted to translate our successful consumer-centered approach from other domains to healthcare and have a real impact on the day-to-day health experiences of millions of our users.

Now, with a few years of experience, we’ve observed that Google Health is not having the broad impact that we hoped it would. There has been adoption among certain groups of users like tech-savvy patients and their caregivers, and more recently fitness and wellness enthusiasts. But we haven’t found a way to translate that limited usage into widespread adoption in the daily health routines of millions of people. That’s why we’ve made the difficult decision to discontinue the Google Health service. We’ll continue to operate the Google Health site as usual through January 1, 2012, and we’ll provide an ongoing way for people to download their health data for an additional year beyond that, through January 1, 2013. Any data that remains in Google Health after that point will be permanently deleted.

If you’re a Google Health user, we’ve made it easy for you to retrieve your data from Google Health any time before January 1, 2013. Just go to the site to download your information in any of several formats: you can print and save it, or transfer it to other services that support industry-standard data formats. Available formats include:
  • Printable PDF including all the records in your Google Health profile
  • Industry-standard Continuity of Care Record (CCR) XML that can be imported into other personal health tools such as Microsoft® HealthVault™
  • Comma-separated value (CSV) files that can be imported into spreadsheets and database programs for ongoing tracking and graphing
  • HTML and XML versions of the original “data notices” sent to your Google Health profile by linked data providers
  • A unified ZIP archive that includes all files you’ve uploaded to your profile, plus all of the formats above
Over the coming weeks we’ll also be adding the ability to directly transfer your health data to other services that support the Direct Project protocol, an emerging open standard for efficient health data exchange. And while we’ll discontinue the Google Health service at the beginning of 2012, we’ll keep these download options available for one more year, through the start of 2013. This approach to download and transfer capability is part of Google’s strong commitment to data liberation principles: providing free and easy ways for users to maintain control of their data and move it out of Google’s services at any time.

In the end, while we weren’t able to create the impact we wanted with Google Health, we hope it has raised the visibility of the role of the empowered consumer in their own care. We continue to be strong believers in the role information plays in healthcare and in improving the way people manage their health, and we’re always working to improve our search quality for the millions of users who come to Google every day to get answers to their health and wellness queries.

Google PowerMeter
We first launched Google PowerMeter as a Google.org project to raise awareness about the importance of giving people access to data surrounding their energy usage. Studies show that having simple access to such information helps consumers reduce their energy use by up to 15%; of course, even broader access to this information could help reduce energy use worldwide.

Since our launch, there’s been more attention given to this notion of people easily accessing their energy data. The installation of smart meters and other home energy devices is picking up steam, and states like California and Texas are moving forward to finalize policies and programs in this area. Earlier this month, the White House announced a goal of giving all consumers access to their energy usage in computer-friendly formats as part of a national plan for modernizing the electricity grid.

We’re pleased that PowerMeter has helped demonstrate the importance of this access and created something of a model. However, our efforts have not scaled as quickly as we would like, so we are retiring the service. PowerMeter users will have access to the tool until September 16, 2011. We have made it easy for you to download your data: simply log in to your account and go to "Account Settings” to export to a CSV (Comma Separated Values) file. We will be contacting users directly with more information on this process.

Momentum is building toward making energy information more readily accessible, and it’s exciting to see others drive innovation and pursue opportunities in this important new market. We’re proud of what we’ve accomplished with PowerMeter and look forward to what will develop next in this space.

By helping people make more informed decisions through greater access to more information, we believe Google Health and PowerMeter have been trailblazers in their respective categories. Ultimately though, we want to satisfy the most pressing needs for the greatest number of people. In the case of these two products, our inability to scale has led us to focus our priorities elsewhere.

As always, we welcome your feedback; please share your thoughts and opinions with us at health-feedback@google.com or powermeter-feedback@google.com. We won’t be able to respond to every email, but we promise we’ll listen.

Daniel Tammet: Different ways of knowing


 Daniel Tammet has high-functioning autistic savant syndrome, he perceived the world in a different way that normal people do: he is ultra sensitive with words and numbers. He showed how he perceived the world, and wished that we can have the curiosity to open new eyes. 




Book Born on a Blue Day
Embracing the Wide Sky: A Tour Across the Horizons of the Mind is a personal and scientific exploration of how the brain works and the differences and similarities between savant and non-savant minds.


Tammet reminds me of the Grand Design by Stephen Hawking: A few years ago the city council of Monza, Italy, barred pet owners from keeping goldfish in curved bowls. The measure's sponsor explained the measure in part by saying that it is cruel to keep a fish in a bowl with curved sides because, gazing out, the fish would have a distorted view of reality. But how do we know we have the true, undistorted picture of reality?
The goldfish view is not the same as our own, but goldfish could still formulate scientific laws governing the motion of the objects they observe outside their bowl. For example, due to the distortion, a freely moving object would be observed by the goldfish to move along a curved path. Nevertheless, the goldfish could formulate laws from their distorted frame of reference that would always hold true. Their laws would be more complicated than the laws in our frame, but simplicity is a matter of taste.

 how do we know we have the true, undistorted picture of reality?

Emiliano Salinas: A civil response to violence

The son of the former president of Mexico speaks about the greatest crisis the Mexicans are having is denial and apathy(冷漠), fear. "It's like someone who has a serious illness, and pretends that it's the flu, and that it goes away. But it doesn't. Mexican has cancer."

He also mentioned the example of the brothers Benjamin, Julian and Eric: two of the brothers mobilize the whole village to rescue one of their kidnapped sibling.

We're facing a very powerful opponent. But we are many more. They can take a man's life. Anyone can kill me, or you, or you. But no one can kill the spirit of true Mexicans. "

2011年6月23日 星期四

Speech to go


http://www.ted.com/themes/not_business_as_usual.html

Three powerful talks from TED2007

http://www.ted.com/talks/ngozi_okonjo_iweala_on_doing_business_in_africa.html



1. 開發內在的CEO
2. 令人驚訝的激勵人心事物
3. 諾貝爾和平獎得主尤努斯:社會企業經營模式
4. 綠色企業能否兼顧獲利?
5. 行銷大師Seth Godin:能傳播出去的點子就能贏
6. Donny Deutsch脫口秀中最棒的企業建議
7. Steve Jobs於2005年對史丹佛畢業生演講
8. 如何精巧製作你的300秒電梯行銷或建立人脈介紹
9. 億萬富翁的企業家建議
10. 令人精力充沛的辦公室瑜珈 

當上帝點燈

當上帝在人的心中點燈,
他總是會確保把一個靈感同時給很多人,


如此,終究有一個人會把它做出來。

2011年6月14日 星期二

Jessi Arrington: Wearing nothing new

Jessi talks at TED Active 2011, she is a designer who buys only second-hand close, wears the vivid color, and follows her own meditation. 

Very beautiful dress and very beautiful attitude.

Her blog http://luckysoandso.com is very worth seeing.




Daniel Kraft: Medicine's future? There's an app for that

Daniel Kraft shares about the future of medicine, with the newest, up to date trend. 
1. More resources spent on preventing instead of curing diseases. 
2. More information to make treatment personalized (personal dosage), such as geographic, nutrition, genetics. 
3. Kinect like cheap device will help examine the patient shape. 

IDEA:  Develop Kinect base game/application for physical rehabilitation. 

Prediction: I felt that the future technology will produce more and more data points, which might be possible to be processed on the client site. Medical device will need to be combined with cloud system. 







He also mentioned singularity university, an academy founded by cisco, google... They seems to have interesting video on the website. And cool event, such as "FutureMed 2011", too.


http://singularityu.org/

2011年6月10日 星期五

Paul Romer's radical idea: Charter cities Paul Romer: The world's first charter city?

Paul Romer's radical idea: Charter cities

Paul Romer talks about how to change rules, so to improve living in (developing) countries. He believes that we can build charter cities that runs independently from other country's rule and makes people choose whether to opt-in.  

He uses the example of China-Hong Kong, North-South Korea example to illustrate that different rules make up different living standard. Romer also arguing that different rules can be adopted as different technology. Which is a rather interesting perspective, as the later is usually more of a smaller scale: technology will be introduce if there is sufficient profit area. But rules are a set of things that can not be introduce separately.

The idea of charter city is therefor to launch these set of rules at the smallest possible scale. 


And as the cost of building a city< the value of a city, this is possible. Romer talks about the Hong Kong, Shenzhen. Indeed, many former colonial countries has enjoyed a better infrastructure/advanced rules from its occupiers, such is the case of  Taiwan from the Japanese occupation as well. What if we can replicate this process without coercion.   

Modulize. Also, he mentioned that we should invite academia to solve some of the problem such as how to draft a multi-party charter. 



Paul Romer: The world's first charter city?

In 2011, Romer talks about this subject, this time sharing an on-going project he has been participating. In Honduras they are trying to build the first charter city. He restate the important elements in building a city which are: 
  1. Tenants  ( Honduras)
  2. Site ( Honduras)
  3. Legal system ( Canada)
  4. Financing
  5.  Manager/Leader 
  6. Builder/ Designer ( South Korean and Singapore)


Problem to solve
How to transit the charter city? Will it always run interdependently?
How to split profit among players?