I happen to have many important documents scanned into PDF format, but 
obviously I wanted to protect them as much as possible.
But I am seeing the total opposite: PalmOS is doing all of this much better 
than it's main competitor.
Certainly Intel learned a lot from this, and they are now focusing on building 
smarter CPUs. I am also planning to redesign this website, I know the current 
design is terrible.
Other excelent features would be EV-DO and a higher resolution screen, but I am 
thinking this may be too much for just a simple refresh. I do have an office, 
however I spend a lot of time moving around, and I have to have all my 
information with me mosto of the time.
These tools hold the promise to improve the quality and safety of patient care, 
avoid medical errors, and enhance cost-effectiveness. Anyway, having to carry 
my PDA again is sort of a burden. I hope to be able to sync it with my 
Blackberry soon. A Pentium M at a much lower frequency can be equivalent in 
terms of performance.
It holds all my email in an easy and unobstructed interface.
It holds all my email in an easy and unobstructed interface.
Paul Vespa, associate clinical professor and director of neurocritical care at 
UCLA. The company has plans to commercialize the technology through a license 
agreement with UCLA. I still don't see it on ePocrates website, but it is 
definitely something that seems useful.
Definitely not a must have, but a most appreciated!
This advancement takes them leaps and bounds ahead of the other program in the 
country, and reinforces the necessity of the PDA in the academic medical 
setting.
In the future, we see every physician carrying a personal wireless information 
device that provides real-time access to complete patient data.
Think no more overnight delivery of piles of dust-covered folders or those 
always-misplaced dental x-rays.
No more conversions to a "pda-friendly" format. It seems that these large 
storage options are designed for multimedia files: music, video and such.
These tools hold the promise to improve the quality and safety of patient care, 
avoid medical errors, and enhance cost-effectiveness.
We're looking at Palm devices so I'll keep my comments directed to that. I am 
also planning to redesign this website, I know the current design is terrible.
Anyway, having to carry my PDA again is sort of a burden. The company has plans 
to commercialize the technology through a license agreement with UCLA.
No more playing around with the mouse to get it done. Definitely not a must 
have, but a most appreciated! Neil Martin, professor and chief of neurosurgery 
at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and co-developer of the GCQ 
system. I hope I can post some more soon, as things move along.
The Global Care Quest system, or GCQ, is intended to improve access to patient 
data, save health care workers time, trim the cost of care and tighten patient 
safety standards. If you want to organize a successful sale, I'd recommend 
contacting everyone from medical students, to residents, to fellows, to 
attending, to staff, to nursing.
As far as the medical stuff goes, I am really not doing much clinical work 
right now.
I haven't installed it yet because my desktop computer is having problems with 
USB devices, and I am unsure what's causing it. Maybe if they get devices that 
are more competitively priced they might regain me as a customer. 

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