Quote Of The Year

Timeless Quotes - Sadly The Late Paul Shetler - "Its not Your Health Record it's a Government Record Of Your Health Information"

or

H. L. Mencken - "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

It Looks Like The Queensland Health Payroll Fiasco Is Going To The Courts With IBM Being Sued For Damages.

This appeared last week.

Queensland government to sue IBM over health payroll disaster

THE Queensland government will serve technology company IBM with court documents over the state’s health payroll disaster, Premier Campbell Newman has confirmed.
Thousands of health staff were overpaid, underpaid or not paid at all when the system was implemented under the former Labor government in 2010.
A five-month inquiry, headed by former Supreme Court judge Richard Chesterman QC, was highly critical of IBM, which won the tender for the failed $1.2 billion system.
It found IBM solicited and received information during the tender process that gave it a distinct advantage over competitors. IBM was also accused of understating the cost of building a new system just to win the contract.
The government-commissioned inquiry added a further $5 million to the damage bill.
The state government will serve IBM on Monday with a statement of claim over its role in delivering the system.
It will seek unspecified damages after law firm Minter Ellison was appointed to prepare the action, The Courier-Mail reports. “I can confirm press reports that we intend to take the matter further,” Mr Newman told reporters in Brisbane on Sunday.
“Queenslanders were wronged, we believe, in the pay affair and we intend to recover money for them - the taxpayers - the men and women of Queensland.”
An IBM spokeswoman said the passage of a year and the hiring of new lawyers by the government cannot change the fundamental facts.
More here:
There is also coverage here:

Queensland to sue IBM over Health debacle

Queensland premier Campbell Newman is belatedly making good on his promise to take IBM to court over its handling of the bungled Queensland Health payroll program, a major factor in his Government’s resounding election victory in 2012.
Newman first announced his intentions nearly a year ago – it has taken this long for him to act. It is now 18 months since Newman banned any agency of the State Government from doing business with IBM, citing problems with the company’s ‘governance and contracting practices’.
Last year a Commission of Inquiry into the project, led by former Supreme Court judge Richard Chesterman, censured IBM and recommended it be banned from further government work. But it also apportioned blame to the Government for negligence in its management of the relationship with IBM.
“It appears that IBM took the state of Queensland for a ride,” Newman said at the time. Now he has finally taken legal action, lodging a Statement of Claim in the Supreme Court of Queensland, suspiciously close to the next election.

The Queensland Health payroll project was one of the major Australian IT disasters of the last decade. The project burnt through $1.2 billion of public money, caused massive problems with late or incorrect payments to health workers, and became a major issue in the 2012 state election, when Campbell’s Liberal Nation Party reduced the ALP to just nine seats in Queensland’s unicameral Parliament.
IBM has defended its position, saying it was poorly briefed by the Government of the day and Queensland Health management. The legal action is problematical because the former Bligh Labor Government settled with IBM before the 2012 election, surrendering its ability to claim more damages.
More here:
Looks like this will provide some fun for the new year as the Goliaths contend.
I am sure some lessons to learn will be revealed as the case proceeds.
David.

Some Further Thoughts On The Abbott GP Go-Payment Nonsense. What A Load Of Rubbish.

Just a few observations I feel need to be made on the Government announcement.

Here it is to start with.

A Strong and Sustainable Medicare

The $7 Medicare co-payment measure announced in the 2014-15 Budget will no longer proceed.
Page last updated: 09 December 2014
PDF printable version of A Strong and Sustainable Medicare - PDF 244 KB

Joint Press Release


The Hon. Tony Abbott MP
Prime Minister

The Hon. Peter Dutton MP
Minister for Health


9 December 2014

The $7 Medicare co-payment measure announced in the 2014-15 Budget will no longer proceed.

The Government will instead implement a package of measures that will strengthen Medicare and help make it sustainable, ensuring Australians will continue to have access to affordable, world-class health care.

The Government has listened to the views of the community.

This new package ensures the Government can make Medicare sustainable, improve the quality of care for patients and continue its repair of the Budget.

The Medicare rebate paid to doctors for some consultations will be reduced by $5 and the troublesome issue of ‘six minute medicine’ will be addressed by encouraging doctors to spend more time with patients.

Optional co-payment and protection for patients


A new optional co-payment will be introduced for GP services with additional protections for patients.

The Government will not impose a co-payment on GP services provided to pensioners, Commonwealth concession card holders, all children under the age of 16, veterans funded through the Department of Veterans’ Affairs, attendances at residential aged care facilities and pathology and diagnostic imaging services.

Incentives paid to doctors to encourage them to bulk bill concession card holders and children under the age of 16 will also remain.

Medicare rebates for common GP consultations will be reduced by $5 for non-concessional patients aged 16 and over from 1 July 2015.

Doctors may choose to recoup the $5 rebate reduction through an optional co-payment or continue to bulk bill non-concessional patients over the age of 16.

Doctors will be under no obligation to charge the co-payment and this decision will be entirely at their discretion.

Improving patient outcomes by tackling ‘six minute medicine’


In a further move to streamline Medicare and improve quality outcomes, the Government will make changes to standard GP consultation items which currently provide the same Medicare rebate for a six minute consultation as for a 19 minute consultation.

This change will ensure that Medicare expenditure more accurately reflects the time a GP spends with a patient.

It encourages a shift away from ‘six minute medicine’ so that appropriate, comprehensive care is better rewarded over patient throughput.

Additionally Medicare fees for all services provided by GPs, medical specialists, allied health practitioners, optometrists and others will remain at their current level until July 2018.

Making Medicare Sustainable and the Medical Research Future Fund


The Government is committed to taking these prudent measures to protect Medicare.

Medicare will not survive in the long term without changes to make it sustainable.

In the last decade spending on Medicare has more than doubled from $8 billion in 2004 to $20 billion today, yet we raise only $10 billion from the Medicare levy. Spending is projected to climb to $34 billion in the next decade to 2024.

In the last year alone, 275 million services were provided free to patients. That’s three out of every four Medicare services being bulk billed.

These changes will contribute more than $3 billion to the Medical Research Future Fund which will fund the research needed to find cures to the health problems of today.

In six years the returns from the MRFF will provide a billion dollars to be invested in medical research annually – doubling our national funding commitments to researchers.

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Here is the link:

http://www.health.gov.au/internet/ministers/publishing.nsf/Content/health-mediarel-yr2014-dutton111.htm

1. The claim is that 8 million people are spared from extra cost under the new plan - this of course means that 15.7 million are not. This is 66% are caught and 33% are not.

2. It is fundamental to the quality of the health system that primary care is well funded and supported. This plan goes in the other direction and is evidence free non rational policy in my view.

3. Can you really imagine that doctors will have stop watches to check they are taking 10 minutes and not 9 min 58 seconds with a consult so that can get the difference between $11 and $35 or so for a consult.

4. Limiting consults to 48 10 mins per working day will ensure a great deal of waiting!

5. I think Nick Xenophon was on the money suggesting that Mr Abbott / Dutton have just made every surgery in the country into a campaign office and not for the Liberal Party.

6. I really think it is inevitable bulk billing rates will collapse and the large clinics will now start charging a lot more than $5.

7. The self-funded chronically ill are unanticipated victims.

All in all this seems to me to be a desperate ploy and I suspect it will still get disallowed in the Senate.

It will be very interesting to see what the AMA GP Council comes up with at its meeting this evening.

Here is a useful link with a lot of reactions to the plan.

http://www.australianageingagenda.com.au/2014/12/10/aged-care-spared-governments-gp-co-payment/

This is pretty bad for our Health System and for Medicare altogether in my view. Patients are going to be the ultimate losers over time.

David. 


Tuesday, December 09, 2014

The Abbott Government Had Gone Mad On The Medicare Co-Payment.

Just announced:

If not a child or pensioner etc. you will have your Medicare Rebate dropped by $5.00

The GP can charge an 'optional' co-payment or take a paycut.

BTW they have to now spend more time with the patient as well.

Their income will take a major hit, to say the least. Most GPs are not rich so what we will see is a huge increase in the out of pocket expenses for most!

Guess how this will play out!

David.

Project Argonaut from HL7 Seems To Be An Important Change In Health IT That Has Real Implications For Australia.

These two articles appeared a day or so ago.
First we have:

HL7 to Accelerate FHIR Specification

DEC 5, 2014 7:15am ET
With a coalition of providers and health IT vendors, Health Level Seven International has launched a project to accelerate development and adoption of HL7’s Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR).
Called the Argonaut Project, the initiative seeks to rapidly develop a first-generation FHIR-based application programming interface and core data services specification to enable expanded information sharing for electronic health records and other health IT. The goal is to hasten current FHIR development efforts to provide industry with “practical and focused FHIR profiles and implementation guides” by the spring of 2015, according to HL7.
FHIR, which leverages the latest web standards, has been gaining momentum as an open healthcare data standard. In October, the Health IT Standards and Policy Committees’ JASON Task Force recommended that the Office of the National Coordinator for HIT mobilize an accelerated standards development process to ready an initial specification of FHIR for certification to support Meaningful Use Stage 3.
Lots more here:
Second we have:

Epic, Cerner, others join HL7 project

Posted on Dec 05, 2014
By Mike Miliard, Editor
Health Level Seven International has launched the Argonaut Project – a collaborative comprising healthcare heavy-hitters such as Epic, Cerner, MEDITECH, Mayo Clinic, Intermountain and Partners HealthCare – to speed the development and adoption of HL7’s standards framework, FHIR.
As it works to spread FHIR – it's pronounced "fire," and stands for Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources – HL7's Argonaut Project touts the participation of blue chip EHR developers, health systems and research groups, including:
  • athenahealth  
  • Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center  
  • Cerner  
  • Epic
  • Intermountain Healthcare
  • Mayo Clinic
  • MEDITECH
  • McKesson
  • Partners HealthCare System  
  • SMART at the Boston Children’s Hospital Informatics Program
  • The Advisory Board Company
FHIR is billed as a next-generation framework that makes use of the latest Web-based standards, with a focus on putting them to work in healthcare interoperability. HL7 officials say FHIR is a so-called "RESTful" application programming interface -- an approach that's based on modern Internet conventions and is commonly deployed in other industries.
As healthcare grapples with data exchange between different systems, FHIR is a "significant advance," according to HL7, in enabling the access and delivery of information, offering enormous flexibility. For patients and providers, its versatility can be applied to mobile devices, Web-based apps, cloud communications, and EHR data-sharing using modular components.
Speaking at RSNA 2014 in Chicago earlier this week, former ONC Chief Scientist Doug Fridsma, MD, who was in charge of the federal agency's interoperability standards, said there was only so much the government could do.
"We need the private sector to step up and do a lot more of this," said Fridsma. "Private sector engagement is going to be critical."
This is just the kind of project he's talking about.
“Our national health IT policy has always focused on the adoption of private sector-led standards,” said Aneesh Chopra, former U.S. chief technology officer, in a press statement announcing the Argonaut Project. “Today’s acceleration initiative draws on that collaborative spirit and will translate into better technologies to support better healthcare for patients and providers.”
The Argonaut Project aims to quickly develop a first-generation FHIR-based API and core data services specification to enable expanded information sharing for EHRs and other health IT based on Internet standards and architectural patterns and style, say HL7 officials. The project will accelerate current FHIR development efforts to provide practical and focused FHIR profiles and implementation guides to the industry by the spring of 2015.
Lots more here:
It looks to me that the Argonaut Project is going to be a ‘game changer’ in terms of how we architect health information exchanges and how information flows are enabled and facilitated.
With the intent in this development being enabling much richer information exchange between the full range of commercial Health IT vendors the implications for our providers, as well as the PCEHR are pretty obvious. Everyone needs to watch closely and start to plan how they will take advantage as the project moves forward.
A ‘word to the wise’!
David.

Monday, December 08, 2014

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 08th December, 2014.

Here are a few I have come across the last week or so.
Note: Each link is followed by a title and a few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.

General Comment

Quite a busy week heading into Christmas. We saw a detailed review of the PCEHR from Karen Dearne and more news from Telstra in its ongoing quest to take over the e-Health world.
Very interesting to see the Health Eating web site come back after being canned by the minister a little less than a year ago.
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Just seven specialist letters on PCEHR

4 December, 2014 Paul Smith
It has cost $40,000 for every shared health summary currently in existence on the billion-dollar PCEHR system, a new report reveals.
The system, which holds a grand total of seven specialist letters and six e-referrals, has been virtually moribund as the Federal Government embarks on the latest revamp to allow the uploading of pathology and diagnostic imaging results.
But the number crunching suggests doctors believe the system is clinically useless, despite the fact it's been running for two years and has cost in excess of a $1 billion.
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Telstra sees health benefits in internet-enabled devices

Date December 2, 2014 - 4:29PM

Max Mason

Business Reporter

Smart watches, driverless cars and internet enabled fridges may grab headlines, but the internet of things has the potential to transform healthcare and save lives, Telstra chief scientist Hugh Bradlow says.
The move to wireless technology has rapidly changed the way people live their lives and further advances are enabling more and more connected devices, creating an ecosystem of machines able to communicate not only with users but with each other, known as the internet of things (IoT).
Dr Bradlow, speaking at the IoT Connect 14 conference in Sydney, said there was huge potential in combining internet-connected health devices on a persons body with data analysis to help react faster to, or even pre-empt, a medical emergency.
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A shirt can warn you of a heart attack

Max Mason
Smart watches, driverless cars and internet enabled fridges may grab headlines, but the internet of things has the potential to transform healthcare and save lives, Telstra chief scientist Dr Hugh Bradlow says.
The move to wireless technology has rapidly changed the way people live their lives and further advances are enabling more and more connected devices, creating an ecosystem of machines able to communicate not only with users but with each other, known as the internet of things (IoT).
Dr Bradlow, speaking at the IoT Connect 14 conference in Sydney, said there was huge potential in combining internet-connected health devices on a person’s body with data analysis to help react faster to, or even pre-empt, a medical emergency.
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Oh shirt! I’m having a heart attack

I wish my Dad had a shirt that could warn him of an impending heart attack, seeing as one cruelly took him 8 weeks ago, but Telstra’s Dr Hugh Bradlow, speaking at the IOT Connect 14 conference says they’re available and are part of the Internet of Things revolution.
A shirt that can detect your heart rate and transmit that ECG data via Bluetooth to your doctor?
Such shirts have already been made with ECG (electrocardiogram) monitoring, according to Telstra’s Chief Technology Officer, who spoke at Informa’s IoT Connect 14 Conference, which was on today and still on tomorrow (2 to 3 December 2014) at the Park Royal Darling Harbour, Sydney.
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e-Mental health for mood and anxiety disorders in general practice

Link to Resource:

3 December 2014
Familiarises general practitioners (GPs) with the range of online programs in Australia that have demonstrated efficacy and are currently available for use by patients with mental health problems.
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Robots readied for dementia care

25 November, 2014 Kate Aubusson
Companion robots are almost ready to be "rolled out" for dementia care in aged care facilities, say Queensland researchers at the heart of international efforts to develop and test robots to help in the care of the elderly.
Professor Wendy Moyle, director of Griffith University's Centre for Health Practice Innovation, made the prediction to Australian Doctor on Tuesday at the launch the centre's Social Robotics and Assistive Technology Laboratory.
Professor Moyle and her team are conducting one of the largest ever companion robotic studies and have received enormous interest from the international community.
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Software glitches: Are you keeping your head cool?

Healthcare around the world is plagued by software problems. To give just a few examples:
Issues with the Obamacare website caused user frustration, but also security breaches. Personal information was disseminated over the internet, affecting millions of people.
Closer to home, the Australian PCEHR has difficulties getting off the ground because of concerns at various levels. Major security problems with the Australian MyGov website – which also gives access to our eHealth records – were exposed by a researcher who was able to hack into the secure part of the website.
Queensland Health has an unfortunate track record of software problems, most recently with Metavision, an intensive care software package that created medication errors.
Why is the healthcare industry prone to these software debacles?
I caught up with Australian health IT experts to get some answers. In this post I’m talking to Sydney professor Enrico Coiera, who has extensive experience in the field of health informatics and bioinformatics. He’s got interesting things to say about eHealth, the PCEHR, and Telstra’s plans to enter the healthcare market.
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UNSW researchers aim to secure smartwatches for e-health

Australian Research Council awards $322,800 grant for three-year project
Fitbit watches could be used for e-health if properly secured, say UNSW researchers.
Researchers at the University of New South Wales have been awarded a $322,800 grant to conduct research into boosting the security of wearable technology.
The UNSW engineers received a three-year Discovery grant from the Australian Research Council (ARC) for a project that will commence in 2015.
The researchers hope to develop technology that can be incorporated by device makers into popular wearable fitness devices like Fitbit and smartwatches from Google and Apple. The technology would make these devices secure and trusted enough to feed their data into mainstream health systems, a UNSW statement said.
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For Immediate Release on the 4 December 2014

MedicalDirector Publishing and Knowledge launches the new digitised version of the Paediatric Injectable Guidelines 4th Edition

MedicalDirector Publishing and Knowledge is excited to be launching The Paediatric Injectable Guidelines 4th Edition for the first time in digital format.
This unique Australian publication has been created by a leader in paediatric healthcare, The Royal Children’s Hospital Melbourne (RCH).
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Media Release
4 December 2014

Melbourne innovators win the $100,000
Janssen Health and Technology Challenge (HaTCH) 2014

A team of Melbourne health tech innovators has won the inaugural Janssen HaTCH challenge – and will receive a $100,000* grant to accelerate the development of their idea ‘Footprints’ with Janssen Australia. The announcement was made at an awards dinner held in Sydney yesterday evening.
Footprints, a sensor system developed by Quanticare Technologies,  has the ability to predict falls in the elderly before they occur. The intention is that the device, when affixed to a walking frame, will continuously monitor a senior’s walking quality, informing doctors when interventions may be needed.
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Dumped health food rating site relaunched

Published: 2:23 pm, Saturday, 6 December 2014
A healthy food rating website has been reinstated by the federal government 10 months after it was pulled down.
The 'Health Star Rating' website was initially launched by Assistant Health Minister Fiona Nash in February but was pulled down shortly after.
It was relaunched on Saturday to provide a system of rating food based on energy, saturated fat, total sugars and sodium content.
The website take down sparked claims Senator Nash's former chief of staff was a junk food lobbyist.
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Health Star Rating System website re-launched after controversy

Date December 6, 2014 - 7:12PM

Dan Harrison

Health and Indigenous Affairs Correspondent

Assistant Minister for Health Fiona Nash has launched a system for rating the healthiness of foods 10 months after shutting down a website to promote the scheme.
In February, Senator Nash demanded a website for the Health Star Rating system be taken down a day after it was published. The controversy sparked claims of conflict interest that ended with the resignation of Senator Nash's then chief of staff, Alastair Furnival after Fairfax Media revealed he was the co-owner of a lobbying firm which had represented junk food clients.
On Saturday, health groups who had been critical of Senator Nash's earlier decision to pull the website appeared beside her outside a Canberra shopping centre to celebrate its rebirth.
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Telstra’s Shane Solomon on the potential for ehealth

One of telecommunications giant Telstra’s most intriguing new investments is in the ehealth area, with its business, Telstra Health, headed up by respected healthcare identity Shane Solomon.
According to Solomon, speaking with eHealthspace.org in an exclusive interview, he became intrigued with the possibilities a Telstra-owned healthcare business would open up when he was KPMG’s National Partner in Charge of Healthcare.
“Basically when I was at KPMG Telstra ran a process to identify adjacent businesses that it might move into,” he says. “We put up a few ideas, and I put up one about ehealth. I believed at the time, and still believe that the future of healthcare is not about people in hospitals, it’s about how people are cared for at home. The labour intensive model we have at present is simply not sustainable.”
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The AMT v20141130 November release is now available for download

Created on Friday, 28 November 2014
The AMT v20141130 November release is now available for download from the NEHTA website.

FHIR and Healthcare Informatics Education

Posted on December 3, 2014 by Grahame Grieve
One of the interesting things about FHIR is how it offers new prospects for real practical hands-on education.
This is about much more than that it’s much easier and more accessible than other health informatics standards. These are the reasons why:
  • the technology base of the implementation is much more open (browsers, etc)
  • there’s a great abundance of open source tools
  • the community’s focus on examples means that there’s already lots of examples
  • the general focus on patient access to data will mean that students are much more easily able to get access to real data (their own, and others – by permission, of course)
But so far, this has remained just a prospect.
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Queensland government to sue IBM over health payroll disaster

THE Queensland government will serve technology company IBM with court documents over the state’s health payroll disaster, Premier Campbell Newman has confirmed.
Thousands of health staff were overpaid, underpaid or not paid at all when the system was implemented under the former Labor government in 2010.
A five-month inquiry, headed by former Supreme Court judge Richard Chesterman QC, was highly critical of IBM, which won the tender for the failed $1.2 billion system.
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Queensland to sue IBM over Health debacle

Queensland premier Campbell Newman is belatedly making good on his promise to take IBM to court over its handling of the bungled Queensland Health payroll program, a major factor in his Government’s resounding election victory in 2012.
Newman first announced his intentions nearly a year ago – it has taken this long for him to act. It is now 18 months since Newman banned any agency of the State Government from doing business with IBM, citing problems with the company’s ‘governance and contracting practices’.
Last year a Commission of Inquiry into the project, led by former Supreme Court judge Richard Chesterman, censured IBM and recommended it be banned from further government work. But it also apportioned blame to the Government for negligence in its management of the relationship with IBM.
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Queensland government 'blame shifting' on health payroll: IBM

Date December 1, 2014 - 10:59AM
The Queensland Government is attempting to rewrite history by launching legal action against IBM over the failed health payroll system, the tech giant says.
Premier Campbell Newman confirmed on Sunday that the government will this week serve IBM with court documents over the system which was implemented under Labor in 2010.
Thousands of health staff were incorrectly paid when the system malfunctioned after its rollout by IBM, in a debacle that is expected to ultimately cost taxpayers $1.2 billion.
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Queensland government 'blame shifting': IBM

Premier Campbell Newman has confirmed that the government will this week serve IBM with court documents over the failed health payroll system
The Queensland government is attempting to rewrite history by launching legal action against IBM over the failed health payroll system, the tech giant says.
Premier Campbell Newman confirmed on Sunday that the government will this week serve IBM with court documents over the system which was implemented under Labor in 2010.
Thousands of health staff were incorrectly paid when the system malfunctioned after its rollout by IBM, in a debacle that is expected to ultimately cost taxpayers $1.2 billion.
"Queenslanders were wronged, we believe, in the pay affair," Newman told reporters on Sunday.
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To relieve 'password fatigue', Intel buys identity management company

Passwordbox offers one-click login to multiple sites
Intel is strengthening its effort to reduce what it calls the "pain of passwords" by acquiring PasswordBox, a Canadian company that offers an online identity manager designed to let users log on to a range of websites and services with just one click.
PasswordBox lets users store login credentials in what the company calls a virtual safety deposit box. When surfing the Web, users can click on the sites they want to login to and PasswordBox handles the login.
The tool, which has over 14 million downloads, will become a part of the Safe Identity organization within Intel's Security Group, the company said.
Intel Security is planning to use PasswordBox's one-click login system for mobile devices and browsers to reduce what it calls "password fatigue."
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AMA Victoria congratulates new Minister for Health, Jill Hennessy

Thursday 4 December

AMA Victoria congratulates newly appointed Minister for Health Jill Hennessy and Minister for Mental Health Martin Foley.

Big tasks ahead, incl. public hospital bed count and building the Western Women’s + Children’s Hospital and the Victorian Heart Hospital
AMA Victoria congratulates Jill Hennessy and Martin Foley on their respective ministerial appointments.
“AMA Victoria looks forward to working closely with Health Minister Hennessy to secure the long-term future of the Victorian health system. We are particularly supportive of the new Government’s commitment to undertake a public hospital bed count and expand health services in the western and eastern growth corridors,” President of AMA Victoria, Dr Tony Bartone, said today.
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HFC suburbs still in NBN no man's land

Date December 1, 2014 - 11:03AM

Adam Turner is an award-winning Australian freelance technology journalist with a passion for gadgets and the "digital lounge room".

If HFC pay TV cable runs through your suburb then you're still last in line for the NBN.
The next phase of the NBN rollout still doesn't bring pay TV cables into the mix.
Having abandoned efforts to run fibre to 97 per cent of Australian premises after the change of Federal government, NBN Co's plans for the multi-technology mix network are gradually taking shape. While retaining the fibre already laid down, the new-look NBN will rely heavily on Australia's existing copper phone lines and HFC pay TV cables along with satellite and fixed wireless in remote areas.
More than 12 months after the change of government, the next stage of the rollout map has finally been unveiled – covering scheduled construction work up to June 2016. It will be updated every three months with "further detail to reflect ongoing variations brought about by process and technology improvement," according to NBN Co chief Bill Morrow.
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NBN Co announces first rollout map for Coalition's multi-technology NBN

Date December 1, 2014 - 12:15AM

Hannah Francis

NBN Co has published an ambitious new schedulefor rolling out the national broadband network (NBN) to an additional 1.9 million premises in 19 months, ahead of an imminent announcement on its long-awaited re-negotiation with Telstra.
The list details 400 cities, suburbs and towns across Australia where homes and businesses will be connected to the network by June 2016 - or 100,000 connections per month.
Just over 300,000 premises have been connected to the NBN in the four years since the rollout began.
It is the first time fibre-to-the-node (FTTN) technology has been included in a forecast. It connects copper telephone lines from multiple premises to a single node that then connects to fast broadband fibre.
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Rural towns run into internet 'brick wall'

SALLY CRIPPS
05 Dec, 2014 03:00 AM
Maranoa's Bruce Scott says he is urging Telstra to increase capacity to towns in his electorate to ease internet congestion headaches.
WHILE recent visits by political figures to remote parts of Queensland have shone a light on diabolically inadequate internet and mobile phone capacity there, many small western towns that would normally expect a reasonable service are also finding their internet is grinding to a halt.
Social media posts are full of complaints from people in places such as Hughenden, Blackall and Thargomindah, who once had reasonable speeds but now experience as much difficulty loading pages or connecting to services online as their out-of-town cousins.
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NBN releases construction plan

NBN Co CEO Bill Morrow says the forecast follows a number of successful multi-technology trials
NBN Co has named the next 460 suburbs and towns to get the new-look National Broadband Network.
About 1.9 million homes and businesses across all states and territories are set to be connected by June 2016, the company says.
The latest rollout phase, unveiled on Monday, is the first to reflect the company's new 'Multi-Technology Mix, which includes fibre-to-the-node as well as fibre-to-the-premises.
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Stephen Hawking warns artificial intelligence could end humankind

  • The Times
  • December 03, 2014 11:07AM
ARTIFICIAL intelligence is a threat to human existence, Stephen Hawking, one of Britain’s best known scientists, has warned.
“The development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race,” he said in an interview.
His warning came in response to a question about a revamp of the technology he uses to communicate, which incorporates a basic form of AI.
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NASA's Orion successfully completes historic test flight

Date December 6, 2014 - 3:59AM

Irene Klotz

Cape Canaveral, Florida: A NASA spacecraft designed to one day fly astronauts to Mars has made a near-bullseye splashdown in the Pacific Ocean, wrapping up a flawless, unmanned debut test flight around Earth.
The uncrewed Orion capsule blasted off aboard a Delta 4 Heavy rocket, the biggest in the fleet, just after dawn on Friday (about 2am on Saturday AEDT) from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. Three hours later, it reached peak altitude of 5800 kilometres above the planet, a prelude to the most challenging part of the flight, a 32,000 km/h dive back into the atmosphere.
Orion survived a searing plunge through the atmosphere, heating up to 2200 degree Celsius – twice as hot as molten lava – and experiencing gravitational forces eight times stronger than Earth's.
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Enjoy!
David.