Elektromobilität: Wohin mit den vielen Akkus?

Akkus sind die wichtigste Komponente von Elektroautos. Doch auch, wenn sie für die Autos nicht mehr geeignet sind, sind sie kein Fall für den Schredder. Hersteller wie Audi testen Möglichkeiten, sie weiterzuverwenden. Ein Bericht von Dirk Kunde (Akku, Elektroauto)
Quelle: Golem

Android: Juni-Update beseitigt acht kritische Fehler

Es ist wieder Patchzeit für Android-Nutzer. Im Juni-Update beseitigt Google erneut zahlreiche Sicherheitsprobleme. Zwei der Fehler der höchsten Kategorie betreffen fast alle Anwender neuerer Android-Versionen. Andere wiederum sind nur in Android 9 zu finden. (Android, Sicherheitslücke)
Quelle: Golem

Empowering clinicians with mobile health data: Right information, right place, right time

Improving patient outcomes and reducing healthcare costs depends on healthcare providers such as doctors, nurses, and specialized clinician ability to access a wide range of data at the point of patient care in the form of health records, lab results, and protocols. Tactuum, a Microsoft partner, provides the Quris solution that empowers clinicians with access to the right information, the right place, at the right time, enabling them to do their jobs efficiently and with less room for error.

The Azure platform offers a wealth of services for partners to enhance, extend, and build industry solutions. Here we describe how one Microsoft partner uses Azure to solve a unique problem.

Information fragmentation results in poor quality of care

A patient is brought into the emergency department with a deep cut to the leg. The wound is several days old and the patient is exhibiting symptoms of illness, perhaps infection. As a clinician, you know the hospital has a clear protocol for wound management and possible infections. Do you know where to find this information quickly? Is it on a wiki, internal website, or on paper in a binder? Lastly, is it current? Finding the right information in these conditions can be time-consuming and stressful. Or worse, it could be inaccurate and out of date.

In many healthcare provider organizations today, information is fragmented between electronic health records (EHR), on-line third-party sites, intranet sites, and on paper. Additionally, some information may be on secured sites, not visible to everyone and data disappears if it’s unavailable offline. This situation can be detrimental to the quality of patient care because critical data is available too late or not at all. Even with internet access, the wrong information may come from a search engine. So aside from the logistical challenges of making data available, it’s important to ensure that only the right information is found. So, the enduring challenge is getting the right information to the right person, in the right place, and at the right time.

The searchability cost of file systems

Even a facility with modern IT resources such as computers, tablets, or specialized instruments presents obstacles in the search for information. Users must navigate through the network and tunnel into folders, backtracking if they are wrong. Some folders may not be available to everyone or require asking for permission when time is of the essence. Websites and apps may also require authorization. So what happens if a device is offline? Computer systems present their own hurdles to quick access.

Solution

The challenge has become a problem-to-solve for one Microsoft partner, Tactuum, who created the Quris Clinical Companion. Working with some leading hospitals, including the University of Washington and the University of Michigan, they are solving the problem for healthcare. From the Tactuum website comes this description:

“Our flagship product allows organizations to push out to staff, in real-time, the latest guidelines, protocols, algorithms, calculators and clinical handbooks. Put your existing clinical resources into clinicians’ hands right now and know that they’re using the latest and most up-to-date information.”

Tactuum has a few notable goals:

Right information: The content is vetted, with security safeguards. The content is easy to use, and data consumption insights are provided.
Right place: Available where you need it through mobile devices, workstations, and EHR systems.
Right time: Available on and offline. When online, real-time updates become possible.
Right cost: Minimal IT involvement, low maintenance, and no paper or printing required.

The graphic below illustrates the components and workflow of the system.

Benefits

Improve quality of care due to more effective decision-making (quicker and more reliable).
Save money on printing requirements, easier maintenance, and streamlined distribution.
Innovation through powerful data and analytics.

The solution supports improving patient outcomes with critical information at the point of patient care, saving both time and money. Here’s one example, according to a registered nurse and Quris user at Airlift Northwest in Seattle:

“Time savings has been immeasurable. In the past it was required to have a workgroup of staff, educators, and medical directors to review and update the hardcopy “Bluebook.” This was very expensive and required significant time. Now, a smaller group reviews policies and resources, does updates, and uploads it directly to the organization’s server for immediate use.”

Azure services

The Microsoft Azure worldwide presence and extensive compliance portfolio provide the backbone of the Quris solution, including the following key services:

Web Apps: Supports Windows and Linux
Blob Storage: Multiple blob types, hot, cool, and archive tiers
Azure Active Directory: Identity services that work with your on-premises, cloud, or hybrid environment
Azure SQL Database: Unmatched scale and high availability for compute and storage
Xamarin: Connects apps to enterprise systems, in the cloud or on premises

Next steps

To see more about Azure in the healthcare industry see Azure for health.

Go to the Azure Marketplace listing for Quris and select Contact me.
Quelle: Azure

Cloud Asset Inventory: Easier inventory management, security analysis and config monitoring

Cloud security, fleet management and operations tasks like troubleshooting, monitoring and auditing all require clarity and visibility into your Google Cloud Platform (GCP) resources, such as firewall rules, buckets, and VMs, and policies like IAM policies and org policies. But without a great inventory service, identifying resources and policies across hundreds or even thousands of projects is no trivial task. Last October, we announced Cloud Asset Inventory export service in beta to meet your inventory management and asset administration needs, and the Cloud Asset Inventory export service is now generally available.With the Cloud Asset Inventory export service, you can either export all your inventory at a given point of time, or export the full event change history of particular resources within a specific timeframe. You can then use that exported data to run analysis and answer common security, monitoring and troubleshooting questions like:“How has the IAM policy on my production project changed during the last 30 days?”“How many VMs in type n1-standard-64 are there in my org?”“Which GCS buckets are labelled ”internal” and “confidential” across my org?”“What did my firewalls look like three days ago under the folder ‘Development’?”Broad Institute has been using the exportAsset API to gain a comprehensive view of their GCP inventory. Here is what Lukas Karlsson, Cloud Architect and Developer Advocate from Broad Institute, has to say:”As an organization with a large number of cloud resources to track and manage, Cloud Asset Inventory has made it much easier to catalog our Google Cloud Platform resources. Instead of querying dozens of APIs to obtain a full picture of our environment, we can easily discover all the assets in a Project, Folder or an entire Organization with Cloud Asset Inventory” – Lukas Karlsson, Cloud Architect and Developer Advocate, Broad InstituteNew features in Cloud Asset InventorySince we launched the Cloud Asset Inventory beta, we’ve added several features based on your feedback.1. Increased resource coverageCloud Asset Inventory now supports resources from 15 GCP services and IAM policies. Some new resources onboarded including resources from CloudSQL, BigQuery, BigTable. Especially, we would like to call out that we now support Kubernetes resources within Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) and Anthos. You can find the full list of supported GCP services and resource types here.2. Folder level exportWith GA, not only can you export a snapshot of your inventory from an org or a project, but also from a folder, helping you better understand your resources according to your org structure and resource hierarchy.3. Finer grained permission controlWe’ve added finer-grained IAM permission controls based on content type (resources vs IAM policies), allowing admins to better customize IAM roles when granting permissions.Providing asset data for other toolsCloud Asset Inventory is the source of assets for several Google Cloud and third-party tools. Cloud Security Command Center surfaces the resources and IAM policies from Cloud Asset Inventory to provide you the unified assets and security findings portal, while Forseti Security imports assets from Cloud Asset Inventory to keep track and monitor your environment.Using Cloud Asset InventoryYou can interact with Cloud Asset Inventory export service from APIs or the gcloud command line. For example, here’s how to use gcloud to find out what the Compute Engine VM instances under your production project looked like three days ago using gcloud:Then, if you want to audit how a firewall rule changed in the last seven days, you can use the batchGetAssetHistory API, or use the gcloud command example below:Export to BigQuery for more powerful analysisYou can also export data from Cloud Asset Inventory to BigQuery using this open source tool.Once in BigQuery, you can use complex SQL expressions to answer interesting questions like:- Are all resources that contain a user in their IAM policy?- What are all the external IP addresses currently assigned to me?- How many Cloud SQL and Compute Engine instances are currently running?Or you can import the asset inventory data to your own favorite BI tool for any analysis you need.Spotify’s inventory graph explorationWe are super excited to see all the cool stuff you will do with this asset data. For example, Spotify downloads the assets needed for their whole org, and then builds graphs to visualize the relationship between resources and the impact of IAM policies. Check our their blog for more details.Visibility and clarity into all your resources and policiesWith Cloud Asset Inventory, our goal is to make it easy for you to see the status of your Google Cloud resources, across various services and projects. We encourage you to try the new Cloud Asset Inventory export APIs. To get started, visit the documentation.
Quelle: Google Cloud Platform