Health Care and Media

In high school, I learned a lot about how our culture and media reflect the deep longings of society.

It\’s kind of late at night and TBS / Peachtree TV have been running some old movies that they have rights to occasionally – The Rainmaker and John Q.  John Q is the newest one and was made in 2002. Both reflect on the health insurance issue in the United States.

In The Rainmaker with Matt Damon, Danny Devito, and John Voit, Matt Damon plays a recent lawyer who gets a case with a young adult male who has leukemia and is insured by Great Benefit (door to door private health insurance) who refuses to pay for his bone marrow transplant claim. In the end it shows that the insurance company was basing their business on NOT PAYING claims or for uncommon practices that were so common that their investment partners suggested investing in. The movie was released in 1997.

John Q is with Denzel Washington and a handful of other major actors Robert Duvall, etc whose son has an enlarged heart and an HMO that won\’t pay for the needed transplant (in fact, I believe there are off the list, on the list practices mentioned.) John Q takes the hospital hostage until the surgery is eventually performed.

Seriously though, over a decade has passed since the rain maker suggested that health care insurance was the wrong system. In 10 years the system has reportedly gotten worse – as insurance companies have been putting more and more money into advertising than actual medical procedures. It\’s 2009, and people don\’t see a need for reform. Newsflash, you\’ve seen the need, you\’ve seen or heard of the movies, you thought the movies made great points, and now you just don\’t want to act — have a financial interest from insurance companies (congressmen and senators) – or are to arrogant to put yourself in other people\’s shoes.

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-10-25

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I\’m at Bar Camp Atl 3

Tonight I am camping downtown at the ATDC in the Centergy building of Gatech 5th street after a fun 6 hours listening and learning about various cool subjects.

\"\"The night started with barbecue before the opening credits to the cool sponsors like Microsoft, ATDC, TechDrawl, and an insurance co.

I was a little confused at first with the room setup (there were 8 rooms available – but better to be prepared) and scheduling was sort of quick and on the fly.  So on the fly that my seminar got moved to the front when somebody needed a projector later on (on the bright side, I got to see Sherry\’s presentation on social media (more to come later.)

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The first thing to know about my presentation is that I planned to have maybe 5 minutes to present with a projector and a quick q&a, but instead, I had 30 minutes to present (luckily I undid this by finding the room about 5 minutes late.) My presentation was on Peltier Junctions, thermo couples, and an ideation session into Micro-tech producing a ceramic paint with magnetically align-able junctions.  Unfortunately, I only had two attendees and one was a little on the ADHD side of things. The important thing though is that we were involved in the exchange of ideas; one of my guests expressed a great idea where peltiers could be used: water towers – because the water is chilled (and this takes energy, and the top of the tower is exposed to sunlight – a peltier could insulate and help provide electricity at the same time!

Next, @sherryheyl from concept hub inc showed us her ideas on social media marketing and different revenue models. Some of the more interesting ideas were that \”Knowledge is no longer power\”, \”Knowledge is free\” based on the example of Good Will Hunting learning all that he knew for $1.50 in late charges from the local library.  She also talked about the issue of financial advisors not knowing how to use technology, so monetize advisors by training them and certifying them to use your site.

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Then I went to the Duct Tape Corset session (how to make duct tape clothing)

which was over-hyped on twitter by the likes of Stephen Fleming (the competing session) and Keith McGregor, but was still interesting with the 3 people who did show up to discuss it, including a man wanting to make a vest. I think that using paper towels or cotton for the foundation for these is a much better idea for breath though (than a trashbag.)

Next, I went to a more casual conversation on micro appliances where THE MICROSOFT HATER (he yelled against the MSFT sponsor to start the night) presented us with three of his more mobile devices – a nokia mini laptop, a psp type device, and the gameboy mini (showing how the loader would load any

rom catridge inserted. These discussions lead to topics concerning screen size, typability, batter life, and I even talked about my netbook. BTW, I got a lot of comments about my mini 10, and a lot of people are impressed by its size and the hd decoder chip. The conversation was really educational, and the guy presenting works with the it at GPC.

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Chris, somebody that I\’ve met through Ajai and the GT Young Entrepreneurs and SOBreakfasts from Fandomu.com who runs MomoCon (a free anime convention held near gatech) presented on creating more community with your social network. We did sidetrack a little into getting together a \”skeptics\” group and a lot of the ideas were based on little things that people will save for to spend on at a convention and using local resources, having short inventory items (food/tshirts) and working with similar ideas to co-op or otherwise provide adequate spacing to provide.

It was about 11 now, and I walked in on the \”end\” of @stephenfleming\’s QA session on the energy grid, alternative energy, and solar power on the tail of the  Hydrogen Myth. My question as to whether we really should look at the smart grid technology or more toward independent generation led to an interesting discussion with Michael about the Russian micro nuclear generators that were liquid lead cooled (so automatically contained if overheated) that could power a neighborhood, be plenty safe and maintenance free underground for ~ 20 years in the size of a meeting table. The conversation continued until the 11:30 spot and ventured into how Georgians want Atlanta destroyed in flooding and a history lesson into Milton County (which I contend if it does split off again will only be doomed to eventually repeat history eventually because Atlanta is where all of the people complaining about being taxed from work – I don\’t care how long ago something happened, if it happened for a legitimate reason, that could legitimately happen again – these citizens shouldn\’t complain about supporting the lower half of the county now, when 70 years ago it was the opposite, because 70 years can happen again pretty easily. ) Then we talked about the brain train and the idea that it might take 25 years for the beltline to be really begun, when the property and old tracks are already there and just need some cement trucks to get started.

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The last session I went to was Tim talking showing how reverse engineering with IDA can help find security issues or otherwise audit programs to ensure, or just see what types of comparisons and api calls a given program is making. We reverse engineered code, found a map to where a comparison occurred in a password program, and then rewrote that line to accept any password. One example is to bust the myth of paranormal activity sensors for iphones … see if they\’re just random or if they do actually call api functions to the gps, microphone, or g sensor.

A few suggestions for the event would be a chance to get to the schedule, groupthink with people and decide which presentations would be best. I\’m not sure than an online schedule would work the best, but it could, so I could figure out who i want to go listen to while listening to a presentation.

Some presentations that I hear were good were \”How to Stare at Women\” by Sean, a craft homebrew beer session by MSFT Hater dude, a MakeBot cheap 3d printing (plastic) presentation by http://www.ericweinhoffer.com – and Michael Mealling\’s space talk.

Late night is getting late (and dang, wordpress wants an update. ) Here I am camping in the middle of the ATDC room, with somebody snoring nearby. Goodnight, I look forward to tomorrow. Maybe I will present about using ffmpeg for your multimedia application/ service tomorrow.

Other late night activities included talking about histories and hobbies with guns (yeah I talked about my 5 in a dime with a 22 and shooting a black powder rifle) under the veil of the Zombie Apocalypse and playing some Call of Duty 4 with some startup modded Xbox controller (sometimes I really wish that I was into video games.)

Finally, a big thanks to the sponsors, Microsoft, the McRae insurance group, tech drawl, and ATDC. Learning a lot.

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Balloon Boy and Energy / Work

I\’ve really enjoyed the recent helium experiments that people are doing, whether it is for upper atmosphere  photography or just a publicity stunt.  In combination with watching Jame\’s May\’s ig Ideas (from the BBC) I started thinking about all of that force that is relatively being exerted for a balloon to fly that high – in effect, for upper atmosphere testing – 1lb for 104km.

And it got me thinking about wave energy as well, because, a BUOY is going to have an even greater buoyancy differential in water.

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But I couldn\’t figure out how to harness this energy, something was/is missing. We have this awesome lifting force (in the deep sea) that we can only use once to create energy (and it uses more energy to be able to repeat the process.)

James May\’\'s Big ideas do cover the kite idea of wind power generation where one kite flies high to generate power until you make an adjustment and have it sink down until the next Kite flies and generates all of the electricity it needs.

So what I\’ve been trying to figure out for days is if it is at all possible in some way to generate power from this contained force – which is the problem, by containing the forces you no longer have any WORK actually being done. In fact, the closest I came to an idea was that the spring would change temperatures as it expands or contracts in a newtonmeter – which would still only be the work of the spring stretching.

Seems like a linear motor buoy is still the best option to use these ideas to generate electricity, because both the seas and the atmosphere have currents and so a sort of linear action will occur.

I had thought that the easy reason why all of this thinking was just a perpetual motion dream because undoubtedly a balloon bladder can\’t contain a tiny gas element forever. Forward on though, because at least I\’m in the ideation mood.

I still want to make a linear prototype buoy for a lake… because I know a lot of people who like lakes, like making wakes, or like wakes to be dissipated. If we can take all of the waste energy from boat\’s excess wakes, then it could power a boat lift? or the lighting? or maybe, given enough charging time, an electric boat. Why not add the additional balloon at the side posts too?

white paper on the subject for more science.

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-10-18

  • Sometimes I wonder what life would be like if I dropped everything and rethought hopes and dreams. #
  • Just put twitterberry on a phone #
  • I really wish that people would stop using the $.DJI as a benchmark. It's been bouncing off of 10k incase you haven't heard #
  • $15 is way too much to pay for commissions. see @tradeking ($5.95+.65) or http://interactivebrokers.com @mr__taylor #
  • #Glee Quinn looked great in the closing scene. This show is catch-ey #
  • Eager to see the new research projects at the GVU Research Showcase tomorrow at 1pm.http://bit.ly/OAZK3 get to see my old lab. #
  • Headed via Marta to TSRB for 1pm research showcase. http://bit.ly/OAZK3 get to see my old lab. #
  • Darn. Rain canceled my trip. #
  • RT @TH_RSS So Rude: "When was the last time you did something that inconvenienced 200 people?"…http://bit.ly/31ndRF Cars are rude. #
  • who would have possibly thought that balloon could lift a 6 year old boy. It was so small. #balloonboy #
  • http://www.physorg.com/news174831238.html iRobot and Darpa are creating futuristic robot possibilities like from the Terminator movies #

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