Related Posts
10 Things Doctors can Learn from Programmers
Software development is a subject that isn’t really understood by the public. It’s being treated as something obscure, technical and nerdy. That’s bad, because it has implications for us physicians. We are living in a technological world and are surrounded by products that all once required a piece of code to make it work. From cars to web applications and MRIs. All of these fields require programmers that make use of syntax to tell the products or programs what to do and what to show. The input, a.k.a. the code, is strict and follows a defined set of rules that enable it to work. Programmers (and equivalently engineers from all walks) are often wrongly treated as necessary elements for any product, yet they are hardly being treated as they deserve to be treated – as the people who make things work and who are eventually responsible for a space shuttle bursting or a website being down. Now I don’t really know how to code, except for some HTML and CSS, but I’ve spent endless hours with both physicians and programmers. What came to my mind recently, is that good physicians run through programms in their head. Apart from being empathic […]
doctr.com TV-Tipps für heute, 05. August 2010
Heute Abend werden auf 3sat zwei Beiträge zum Thema Krebsforschung und Krebstherapie gezeigt:
3sat 20.15 Uhr – 21.00 Uhr
Kleine Helden, große Chancen – Kinderkrebsforschung in Europa
Film von Gustav W. Trampitsch
In den letzten Jahrzehnten ist …
Abnehm-Apps: Was taugen sie?
Die aktuelle Ausgabe des Sterns gibt Tipps zum Umgang mit Gesundheits-Apps und verweist u. a. auf zwei Datenbanken, die Verbraucher über geteste Gesundheits-Apps informieren: www.healthon.de: Aktuell können Verbraucher sich über die Testergebnisse von 137 Gesundheits-Apps informieren. www.app-check: Derzeit umfasst die Datenbank 8 Diabetes-Apps. Über Fitness-Apps und die digitale Trends 2014 hat healthon im Februar berichtet.