With telemedicine, there’s no waiting room

Patients no longer have to wait in line to be seen at a doctor’s office or receive a prescription. They don’t even have to leave the house with telemedicine.
If a child has a fever in the middle of the night, a prescription runs out just as someone is about to leave for vacation, or it’s uncertain whether a situation is an emergency, people can now get answers and reassurance.

Doctome offers professional telemedicine services that that patients can use to consult a caregiver by video calls and chat anytime and anywhere, at the moment of need and in their own language. There is no waiting room.
Saving time for the whole system
The groups that typically need the most ongoing medical care are families with children, senior citizens and patients with chronic conditions. People who don’t fit into these categories consume the majority of the time they spend at a hospital or clinic with issues that don’t necessarily require a visit.
Those people can now have telemedicine consultations with their doctors, get e-prescriptions and, in case they do need to go to a hospital, get referrals over the phone, freeing professional caregivers’ office hours for more critical patients.
Rapid growth
Doctome was founded as a subsidiary of MedTrix, medical services firm. MedTrix developed an online doctor solution for the largest health maintenance organization (HMO) in Israel, which is responsible for the care of more than four million people.
The platform combines a CRM component with an integrated electronic health record (EHR) system and generates documents such as clinical summaries, emergency room referrals, digitally signed prescriptions and more. The caregiver sends that information to the patient at the end of a consultation.
In the first 60 months, the HMO conducted more than 600,000 consulting calls with patients. To extend its online doctor solution globally, MedTrix created Doctome, whose target audience is healthcare providers, insurance companies, communications providers that want to sell additional services to their customer base and other large enterprises seeking to provide the service to employees.
Going global
To open up services worldwide, Doctome needed a scalable solution that would not only reuse services, but also help it meet regulations in every country.
Working with IBM, Doctome developed a hybrid solution. In every country where Doctome uses the system, it runs a local database in an IBM Cloud Data Center for its customer relationship management (CRM) application, which holds all patient information and consultation recordings.
Shared services such as mobile services, push notifications, the email system, queue management and the e-prescription portal are delivered through the IBM Bluemix platform. These features are system functionalities and do not hold any patient data requiring privacy protection.
Doctome participated in the IBM Alpha Zone Accelerator program in Israel and achieved its business goal of extending global reach while reducing costs and delivering value to patients more quickly. The solution uses the IBM Watson Question and Answer Service to automatically answer some of the questions that come from patients or from parents, such as how to calm a crying baby, before the patient speaks to a caregiver.
The company trained the IBM Watson interface with protocols, medical data and guidelines. Doctome will also train IBM Watson using medical articles about medications to help answer questions from doctors, nurses and other medical practitioners.
Substantial benefits
Doctome is providing good answers in times of need.
When, in the middle of the night, you don’t know what to do — your child has a high fever or you have another medical issue and you need someone available in 5 to 10 minutes — patients can have a professional consultation, receive a well-documented summary and, if needed, a referral to the emergency room. They can also receive sick notes to give to an employer.
The Israeli HMO found that it reduced the need for emergency room referrals by 40 percent through its telemedicine service. Doctome performed a satisfaction survey among 30,000 customers, and the approval rate was 9.8 out of 10.
Find out more about IBM Cloud healthcare solutions.
The post With telemedicine, there’s no waiting room appeared first on news.
Quelle: Thoughts on Cloud

With telemedicine, there’s no waiting room

Patients no longer have to wait in line to be seen at a doctor’s office or receive a prescription. They don’t even have to leave the house with telemedicine.
If a child has a fever in the middle of the night, a prescription runs out just as someone is about to leave for vacation, or it’s uncertain whether a situation is an emergency, people can now get answers and reassurance.

Doctome offers professional telemedicine services that that patients can use to consult a caregiver by video calls and chat anytime and anywhere, at the moment of need and in their own language. There is no waiting room.
Saving time for the whole system
The groups that typically need the most ongoing medical care are families with children, senior citizens and patients with chronic conditions. People who don’t fit into these categories consume the majority of the time they spend at a hospital or clinic with issues that don’t necessarily require a visit.
Those people can now have telemedicine consultations with their doctors, get e-prescriptions and, in case they do need to go to a hospital, get referrals over the phone, freeing professional caregivers’ office hours for more critical patients.
Rapid growth
Doctome was founded as a subsidiary of MedTrix, medical services firm. MedTrix developed an online doctor solution for the largest health maintenance organization (HMO) in Israel, which is responsible for the care of more than four million people.
The platform combines a CRM component with an integrated electronic health record (EHR) system and generates documents such as clinical summaries, emergency room referrals, digitally signed prescriptions and more. The caregiver sends that information to the patient at the end of a consultation.
In the first 60 months, the HMO conducted more than 600,000 consulting calls with patients. To extend its online doctor solution globally, MedTrix created Doctome, whose target audience is healthcare providers, insurance companies, communications providers that want to sell additional services to their customer base and other large enterprises seeking to provide the service to employees.
Going global
To open up services worldwide, Doctome needed a scalable solution that would not only reuse services, but also help it meet regulations in every country.
Working with IBM, Doctome developed a hybrid solution. In every country where Doctome uses the system, it runs a local database in an IBM Cloud Data Center for its customer relationship management (CRM) application, which holds all patient information and consultation recordings.
Shared services such as mobile services, push notifications, the email system, queue management and the e-prescription portal are delivered through the IBM Bluemix platform. These features are system functionalities and do not hold any patient data requiring privacy protection.
Doctome participated in the IBM Alpha Zone Accelerator program in Israel and achieved its business goal of extending global reach while reducing costs and delivering value to patients more quickly. The solution uses the IBM Watson Question and Answer Service to automatically answer some of the questions that come from patients or from parents, such as how to calm a crying baby, before the patient speaks to a caregiver.
The company trained the IBM Watson interface with protocols, medical data and guidelines. Doctome will also train IBM Watson using medical articles about medications to help answer questions from doctors, nurses and other medical practitioners.
Substantial benefits
Doctome is providing good answers in times of need.
When, in the middle of the night, you don’t know what to do — your child has a high fever or you have another medical issue and you need someone available in 5 to 10 minutes — patients can have a professional consultation, receive a well-documented summary and, if needed, a referral to the emergency room. They can also receive sick notes to give to an employer.
The Israeli HMO found that it reduced the need for emergency room referrals by 40 percent through its telemedicine service. Doctome performed a satisfaction survey among 30,000 customers, and the approval rate was 9.8 out of 10.
Find out more about IBM Cloud healthcare solutions.
The post With telemedicine, there’s no waiting room appeared first on news.
Quelle: Thoughts on Cloud

Can’t-miss Innovation Talks, only at IBM InterConnect 2017

Are you interested in hot-button issues like cyberbullying, fake news, blockchain and cyberwarfare? Then you can’t afford to miss the all-new Innovation Talks at IBM InterConnect 2017.
On March 19 through 23, thousands of the best and brightest in will gather in Las Vegas for IBM’s annual gathering of innovators, thought leaders, academics and technical experts. World-renowned experts from industry and academia will share unique perspectives on how to differentiate your business in the changing world of cloud, cognitive computing, security and the Internet of Things (IoT).
Here are just a few highlights among many fascinating subjects to be tackled at the Innovation Talks:
Fighting cyberbullying with cognitive
According to experts, more than half of today’s teens have already experienced cyber bullying, and 95 percent have observed bullying among their peers. This is rapidly becoming one of the most prevalent psychological issues of the century. Join actor and activist Wayne Brady and additional special guests in this incredible and entertaining session.
Blockchain
Blockchain is transforming the world of money by providing the ability to validate and secure transactions with little or no human intervention. Don Tapscott, author of Blockchain Revolution, will discuss how you can use this technology to create new models of digital trust and disrupt your industry.
Ethics and artificial intelligence
As artificial intelligence continues to advance, we will increasingly see questions about ethical and legal challenges. Dr. Sabine Hauert of the University of Bristol will discuss how to maintain our moral compass when AI removes humans from portions of the decision-making process.
IoT & DDoS attacks
When Fortune magazine asked top business leaders about their biggest challenges in the Fortune 500 CEO survey, two-thirds cited cyber security. As connectivity spreads globally, so does the threat of cyberwarfare, from sophisticated fraud to business-crippling distributed denial of service attacks. CTO and cryptographer Bruce Schneier will discuss how to save IoT and the connected home from a security crisis.

Visit the InterConnect website to learn more, browse a complete listing of sessions, agenda, keynotes and a preview of our exciting entertainment. The conference provides $8,000 worth of training and education, more than 2,000 speaker sessions and 200-plus hands-on exhibitions. Need more reasons to attend? Check out more blogs here.
You can’t afford to miss this word-class event. Register today.
The post Can’t-miss Innovation Talks, only at IBM InterConnect 2017 appeared first on Cloud computing news.
Quelle: Thoughts on Cloud

IBM cloud revenue up 35 percent in 2016

For anyone with any lingering doubts about the rapid growth of , look no further than IBM fiscal year 2016 cloud revenue for proof.
Total cloud revenue hit $13.7 billion on the year, which represented a 35 percent increase. The cloud as-a-service annual revenue run rate trended upward to $8.6 billion in 2016, a staggering 63 percent increase.
IBM Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer Ginni Rometty offered this explanation: &;More and more clients are choosing the IBM Cloud because of its differentiated capabilities, which are helping to transform industries, such as financial services, airlines and retail.&;
IBM Cloud clients include American Airlines, Finnair, Halliburton, Kimberly Clark, MUFG, Sky, the US Army and WhatsApp.
For more about 2016 IBM earnings in cloud and other areas, check out the infographic below and this press release.

The post IBM cloud revenue up 35 percent in 2016 appeared first on Cloud computing news.
Quelle: Thoughts on Cloud

Last week’s blog posts

Making sure your Gerrit changes aren’t broken by Lars Kellogg-Stedman

It’s a bit of an embarrassment when you submit a review to Gerrit only to have it fail CI checks immediately because of something as simple as a syntax error or pep8 failure that you should have caught yourself before submitting…but you forgot to run your validations before submitting the change.

Read more at http://tm3.org/de

On communities: Trading off our values… Sometimes by Flavio Percoco

Not long ago I wrote about how much emotions matter in every community. In that post I explained the importance of emotions, how they affect our work and why I believe they are relevant for pretty much everything we do. Emotions matter is a post quite focused on how we can affect, with our actions, other people’s emotional state.

Read more at http://tm3.org/df

9 tips to properly configure your OpenStack Instance by Marko Myllynen

In OpenStack jargon, an Instance is a Virtual Machine, the guest workload. It boots from an operating system image, and it is configured with a certain amount of CPU, RAM and disk space, amongst other parameters such as networking or security settings.

Read more at http://tm3.org/dg

Writing RPM macro for OpenStack by chandankumar

RPM macro is a short string, always prefixed by % and generally surrounded by curly brackets ({}) which RPM will convert to a different and usually longer string. Some macros can take arguments and some can be quite complex.

Read more at http://tm3.org/dc

TripleO deep dive session (Undercloud – TripleO UI) by Carlos Camacho

This is the seven release of the TripleO “Deep Dive” sessions

Read more at http://tm3.org/db

Installing the TripleO UI by Carlos Camacho

This is a brief recipe to use or install TripleO UI in the Undercloud.

Read more at http://tm3.org/dd
Quelle: RDO

Cloud trends: More businesses are adopting cloud managed services

According to a recent Frost & Sullivan survey of US-based IT decision makers, 80 percent of US business will increase their use of cloud managed services in 2017.
Why this commitment to managed services? At IBM InterConnect 2017, several customers will share their successes and lessons learned. There will also be subject matter experts and executives on site to meet with clients, as well as a hands-on demo lab where attendees can determine the specific costs and benefits of moving to managed cloud.
Here’s a look at some of the customer stories that will be shared at InterConnect:
Caribbean Financial shows how cloud managed services is the answer to Oracle workload needs
Caribbean Financial was in a bind. It had growing business volumes that threatened to overwhelm its existing IT infrastructure, which was leading to delays in processing customer applications and approving their loans. Find out what the company did.
ABN AMRO Bank and IBM Cloud Managed Services: The strategic partnership
ABN AMRO, one of the most successful banks in the world, decided to adopt IBM Cloud Managed Services private cloud to simplify, standardize and reduce the cost of the IT landscape. Find out how it went.
Why a top European business school chose IBM to bring its SAP ERP and CRM systems to the cloud
Bocconi University, a private university in Italy providing education in the fields of economics, management, finance, law and public administration, has been working with IBM to deploy and migrate its SAP ERP and CRM systems to the cloud. See what factors led to the university choosing IBM Cloud and how the partnership has been extended to include additional cloud migration projects.
How Etihad Airlines quickly and easily migrated 70 SAP applications to IBM Cloud
Etihad, one of the largest global airlines, needed to move their entire SAP landscapes from SAP HEC to the cloud in the middle of an ongoing SAP implementation project. Understand the scope, challenges and tactics used to make this project a success.
Learn more about InterConnect and register. You can use the preview tool to review content being featured, based on your area of interest.
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Quelle: Thoughts on Cloud

OpenShift for Developers: Set Up a Full Cluster in Under 30 Minutes

After you play around with OpenShift locally, you will come to the realization that you would enjoy having a 24/7 install of OpenShift that you can publicly host your projects on. This is where a lot of Developers stumble because they aren’t system administrators. For that reason, I took some time to create a video that shows how to install OpenShift Origin 1.4 from start to finish. This means that I create a bare virtual machine, install the operating system, install dependencies (like docker), and then use ansible to install OpenShift. After the install, I then show how to setup wildcard DNS for a public hostname. All in under 30 minutes.
Quelle: OpenShift

US Army taps IBM for $62 million private cloud data center

US Army private cloud data center
For the United States Army, security is a top concern. It&;s a big reason why it chose IBM to build out and manage a private cloud data center at its Redstone Arsenal near Huntsville, Alabama.
The contract for the data center would be worth $62 million over five years, if the Army exercises all its options. Along with the data center, the agreement also gives IBM the go-ahead to provide infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) solutions to migrate applications to the cloud. The goal is to move 35 apps within the first year.
The agreement requires Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) Impact Level 5 (IL-5) authorization, which IBM announced it had received in February 2016. The authorization gives IBM the ability to manage &;manage controlled, unclassified information.&; As of this week, IBM is the only company to be authorized by DISA at IL-5 to run infrastructure-as-a-service solutions on government property. The Army expects to move IBM to IL-6 authorization, which would permit the company to work with classified information up to &8220;secret,&8221; within a year.
Lt. Gen. Robert Ferrell, US Army CIO, said, “ is a game-changing architecture that provides improved performance with high efficiency, all in a secure environment.”
Last year, the Army partnered with IBM on a hybrid cloud solution for its Logistics Support Activity.
For more about this new private cloud data center, read the full article at TechRepublic.
The post US Army taps IBM for $62 million private cloud data center appeared first on Cloud computing news.
Quelle: Thoughts on Cloud

A dash of Salt(Stack): Using Salt for better OpenStack, Kubernetes, and Cloud — Q&A

The post A dash of Salt(Stack): Using Salt for better OpenStack, Kubernetes, and Cloud &; Q&;A appeared first on Mirantis | The Pure Play OpenStack Company.
On January 16, Ales Komarek presented an introduction to Salt. We covered the following topics:

The model-driven architectures behind how Salt stores topologies and workflows

How Salt provides solution adaptability for any custom workloads

Infrastructure as Code: How Salt provides not only configuration management, but entire life-cycle management

How Continuous Delivery/ Integration/ Management fits into the puzzle

How Salt manages and scales parallel cloud deployments that include OpenStack, Kubernetes and others

What we didn&;t do, however, is get to all of the questions from the audience, so here&8217;s a written version of the Q&A, including those we didn&8217;t have time for.
Q: Why Salt?
A: It&8217;s python, it has a huge and growing base of imperative modules and declarative states, and it has a good message bus.
Q: What tools are used to initially provision Salt across an infrastructure? Cobbler, Puppet, MAAS?
A: To create a new deployment, we rely on a single node, where we bootstrap the Salt master and Metal-as-a-Service (formerly based on Foreman, now Ironic). Then we control the MaaS service to deploy the physical bare-metal nodes.
Q: How broad a range of services do you already have recipes for, and how easy is it to write and drop in new ones if you need one that isn&8217;t already available?
A: The ecosystem is pretty vast. You can look at either https://github.com/tcpcloud or the formula ecosystem overview at http://openstack-salt.tcpcloud.eu/develop/extending-ecosystem.html. There are also guidelines for creating new formulas, which is very straight-forward process. A new service can be created in matter of hours, or even minutes.
Q: Can you convert your existing Puppet/Ansible scripts to Salt, and what would I search to find information about that?
A: Yes, we have reverse engineered autmation for some of these services in the past. For example we were deeply inspired by the Ansible module for Gerrit resource management.  You can find some information on creating Salt Formulas at https://docs.saltstack.com/en/latest/topics/development/conventions/formulas.html,  and we will be adding tutorial material here on this blog in the near future.
Q: Is there a NodeJS binding available?
A: If you meant the NodeJS formula to setup a NodeJS enironment, yes, there is such a formula. If you mean bindings to the system, you can use the Salt API to integrate NodeJS with Salt.
Q: Have you ever faced performance issues when storing a lot of data in pillars?
A: We have not faced performance issues with pillars that are deliverd by reclass ENC. It has been tested up to a few thousands of nodes.
Q: What front end GUI is typically used with Salt monitoring (e.g., Kibana, Grafana,&;)?
A: Salt monitoring uses Sensu or StackLight for the actual functional monitoring checks. It uses Kibana to display events stored in Elasticsearch and Grafana to visualize metrics coming from time-series databases such as Graphite or Influx.
Q: What is the name of the salt PKI manager? (Or what would I search for to learn more about using salt for infrastructure-wide PKI management?)
A: The PKI feature is well documented in the Salt docs, and is available at https://docs.saltstack.com/en/latest/ref/states/all/salt.states.x509.html.
Q: Can I practice installing and deploying SaltStack on my laptop? Can you recommend a link?
A: I&8217;d recommend you have a look at http://openstack-salt.tcpcloud.eu/develop/quickstart-vagrant.html where you can find a nice tutorial on how to setup a simple infrastructure.
Q: Thanks for the presentation! Within Heat, I&8217;ve only ever seen salt used in terms of software deployments. What we&8217;ve seen today, however, goes clear through to service, resource, and even infrastructure deployment! In this way, does Salt become a viable alternative to Heat? (I&8217;m trying to understand where the demarcation is between the two now.)
A: Think of Heat as part of the solution responsible for spinning up the harware resources such as networks, routers and servers, in a way that is similar to MaaS, Ironic or Foreman. Salt&8217;s part begins where Heat&8217;s part ends &; after the resources are started, Salt takes over and finishes the installation/configuration process.
Q: When you mention Orchestration, how does salt differentiate from Heat, or is Salt making Heat calls?
A: Heat is more for hardware resources orchestration. It has some capability to do software configuration, but rather limited. We have created heat resources that help to classify resources on fly. We also have salt heat modules capable of running a heat stack.
Q: Will you be showing any parts of SaltStack Enterprise, or only FREE Salt Open Source? Do you use Salt in Multi-Master deployment?
A: We are using the opensource version of SaltStack, the enterprise gets little gain given the pricing model. In some deployments, we use the salt master HA deployment setups.
Q: What HA engine is typically used for the Salt master?
A: We use 2 separate masters with shared storage provided by GlusterFS on which the master&8217;s and minions&8217; keys are stored.
Q: Is there a GUI ?
A: The creation of a GUI is currently under discussion.
Q: How do you enforce Role Based Administration in the Salt Master? Can you segregate users to specific job roles and limit which jobs they can execute in Salt?
A: We use the ACLs of the Salt master to limit the user&8217;s options. This also applies for the Jenkins-powered pipelines, which we also manage by Salt, both on the job and the user side.
Q: Can you show the salt files (.sls, pillar, &8230;)?
A: You can look at the github for existing formulas at https://github.com/tcpcloud and good example of pillars can be found at https://github.com/Mirantis/mk-lab-salt-model/.
Q: Is there a link for deploying Salt for Kubernetes? Any best practices guide?
A: The best place to look is the https://github.com/openstack/salt-formula-kubernetes README.
Q: Is SaltStack the same as what&8217;s on saltstack.com, or is it a different project?
A: These are the same project. Saltstack.com is company that is behind the Salt technology and provides support and enterprise versions.
Q: So far this looks like what Chef can do. Can you make a comparison or focus on the &;value add&; from Salt that Chef or Puppet don&8217;t give you?
A: The replaceability/reusability of the individual components is very easy, as all formulas are &;aware&8217; of the rest and share a common form and single dependency tree. This is a problem with community-based formulas in either of the other tools, as they are not very compatible with each other.
Q: In terms of purpose, is there any difference between SaltStack vs Openstack?
A: Apart from the fact that SaltStack can install OpenStack, it can also provide virtualization capabilities. However, Salt has very limited options, while OpenStack supports complex production level scenarios.
Q: Great webinar guys. Ansible seems to have a lot of traction as means of deploying OpenStack. Could you compare/contrast with SaltStack in this context?
A: With Salt, the OpenStack services are just part of wider ecosystem; the main advantage comes from the consistency across all services/formulas, the provision of support metadata to provide documentation or monitoring features.
Q: How is Salt better than Ansible/Puppet/Chef ?
A: The biggest difference is the message bus, which lets you control, and get data from, the infrastructure with great speed and concurrency.
Q: Can you elaborate mirantis fuel vs saltstack?
Fuel is an open source project that was (and is) designed to deploy OpenStack from a single ISO-based artifact, and to provide various lifecycle management functions once the cluster has been deployed. SaltStack is designed to be more granular, working with individual components or services.
Q: Are there plans to integrate SaltStack in to MOS?
A: The Mirantis Cloud Platform (MCP) will be powered by Salt/Reclass.
Q: Is Fuel obsolete or it will use Salt in the background instead of Puppet?
A: Fuel in its current form will continue to be used for deploying Mirantis OpenStack in the traditional manner (as a single ISO file). We are extending our portfolio of life cycle management tools to include appropriate technologies for deploying and managing open source software in MCP. For example, Fuel CCP will be used to deploy containerized OpenStack on Kubernetes. Similarly, Decapod will be used to deploy Ceph. All of these lifecycle management technologies are, in a sense, Fuel. Whether a particular tool uses Salt or Puppet will depend on what it&8217;s doing.
Q: MOS 10 release date?
A: We&8217;re still making plans on this.
Thanks for joining us, or if you missed it, please go ahead and view the webinar.
The post A dash of Salt(Stack): Using Salt for better OpenStack, Kubernetes, and Cloud &8212; Q&038;A appeared first on Mirantis | The Pure Play OpenStack Company.
Quelle: Mirantis