Sunday, October 07, 2007

McDonald's launches free Wi-Fi in UK restaurants

McDonald's launches free Wi-Fi in UK restaurants

LONDON (Reuters) - Fast food chain McDonald's said on Saturday it would offer free wireless Internet access across its 1,200-strong restaurants in the UK, making it the country's biggest provider of free wireless broadband access.The move reflects increasing competition in the UK's broadband market dominated by contract or pay-as-you-go services, where a regular hotspot user usually has to pay around 5 pounds ($10.18) for an hour log-on.On Thursday, Britain's top fixed-line carrier BT Group said it had teamed up with Wi-Fi crusader FON to allow more than three million UK broadband customers to use hundreds of thousands of hotspots for free.There are around 11,477 Wi-Fi hotspots in the UK and major service providers include The Cloud, BT, and Deutsche Telecom's T-Mobile. McDonald's service will account for about 10 percent of the total Wi-Fi hotspots.

New Microsoft Service Stores Health Records Online


New Microsoft Service Stores Health Records Online
HealthVault gives people a place to keep, research, and share medical informmation

Google News
Microsoft Corp. has launched an online health-care service designed to help patients take control of their health records and monitor their medical conditions.Microsoft's HealthVault, announced Thursday in Washington, D.C., will allow users to store and share health records online, to collect and manage health data on a variety of home devices, and to search for health information."We all know health is incredibly complex, it has lots of information, and we make it harder than it needs to be," said Peter Neupert, corporate vice president of Microsoft's Health Solutions Group. "By making it harder than it needs to be, bad things happen."Patients want tools to simplify their interactions with the health-care system, Neupert added. "They want an information system ... that puts them at the center, that makes it easy for them to manage their health, and their family, and their activities when they interact with the health system," he said. "It's hard, but it's not that hard. It's possible, and it's possible today."The HealthVault applications, available for free on the HealthVault Web site, are designed to allow patients to share their information safely and easily with health-care providers and manage their health issues, such as weight loss and long-term diseases, Microsoft said.The three pieces of HealthVault include:
-- HealthVault Search, a specialized search engine designed to give the most relevant online health content and connect results with HealthVault-compatible products.
-- The HealthVault repository account, an encrypted online e-health record that users and their families can share with doctors.
-- The
HealthVault Connection Center, a place where users can find "plug-and-play" drivers for health monitoring devices such as diabetes meters and heart-rate monitors to connect to the HealthVault accounts.

"We need to make information reusable," Neupert said. "We're all frustrated ... by the simple, stupid things, like having to fill out the clipboard [at a doctor's office] all the time."The HealthVault was developed in cooperation with privacy advocates, including the bipartisan
Coalition for Patient Privacy, Microsoft said. Dr. Deborah Peel, founder of the Patient Privacy Rights Foundation, praised the company for privacy controls on the service, including the prohibition of data transfer without "explicit" informed consent."Consumers finally have a trusted place to store their personal health information that will not be data-mined, because they alone control it," Peel said.Microsoft's new e-health platform will probably be the largest not affiliated with an insurance provider or specific employer, said Lynne Dunbrack, program director at Health Industry Insights, a market research and advisory services firm.But the effort faces several challenges, Dunbrack said. Microsoft is banking on its relationships with outside software developers to create programs that work with HealthVault, she said.In addition, less than 30 percent of doctor's offices and hospitals now use electronic health records, so it will be a challenge for many users to find data to populate the HealthVault records, she said. Only about 1 percent to 3 percent of U.S. consumers have adopted personal e-health records, she said, despite a major push from U.S. President George Bush's administration and several private groups.One of the issues is privacy concerns. "Consumers are quite wary of having their personal health information available and accessible over the Internet," Dunbrack said.Microsoft said more than 40 applications and devices will work with HealthVault now or in the near future. Partners offering applications or devices that will work with HealthVault include: American Diabetes Association; American Heart Association; American Lung Association; Diet.com; Eclipsys Corp.; Healthphone Solutions Ltd.; LifeScan Inc.; Medifast Inc.; NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital; NoMoreClipboard.com; Texas Instruments Inc.; US Wellness Inc.; and Vital Data Technology.Developers interested in building their own HealthVault-based products can download the HealthVault software development kit.