StanBearclaw
Muse
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2009
- Messages
- 967
Christ, you're annoying.
I have to say I think the iPad is ugly and that is usually not a criticism I can make in regards towards a modern Apple product.

And, like I said before, I never claimed that there wasn't. All they need to do is to have people develop specific, highly specialised apps for this market, and the iPad has a market. It may even be better at doing some things than regular tablets that use generic, off-the-shelf software to to tasks that don't really need all of the features of a Word or an Excel.Not to pile on, as i am a bit late in responding, but there already exists this niche market
Given two devices that both meet a person's functional needs, the $500 unit they can actually use is a much better deal to them than the $300 unit they can't figure out.
Improving market share is not necessarily the top priority for all businesses. Just as consumers have differing values, so too do companies.
Yep. And the "tampod" jokes.Have we made the "maxipad" jokes yet?
And, like I said before, I never claimed that there wasn't. All they need to do is to have people develop specific, highly specialised apps for this market, and the iPad has a market. It may even be better at doing some things than regular tablets that use generic, off-the-shelf software to to tasks that don't really need all of the features of a Word or an Excel.
Your data-collectors that use Excel to record data. Do they really need pivot tables, complex macros and formulas? Or are they just entering data into a table? With a little bit of effort you could have an app that just records the data you want it to record and nothing else. You could hire someone to write an app that suits your needs exactly, because there's absolutely no need for it to suit anyone else's. People already do that for the iPhone. They could do it for the iPad just as easily.
I don't dispute this in a sense of looking forward. What I was trying to stress was that in (for example) the hospital environment you had brought up they are not going to be breaking new ground. They are going to be playing against an established, entrenched, mature tablet market with expectations which will compare this new offering to existing and quite well received competition that is itself constantly innovating and improving, and doing so on a foundation of experience, selling to loyal customers.
You had brought up the "potential application" of the iPad as a tablet in hospitals in a way which seemed to suggest such application was largely unexplored. I'm just saying that it isn't, it is more of a "been there, done that" situation, and from what I've read here the iPad would be going into such an environment with a lot less ammunition than the troops already in place.
Scout around this link to get an idea of some of what is already in place. Just in healthcare, and just with this one tablet offering. Here's an example of some of the other players already pursuing this market in applications, and taking specific advantage of tablet form technology. This is all just from the Motion people, and they're only one of the established tablet manufacturers out there.
I think that the general public perception of the tablet format has been that it is somewhat 'geeky', as well as 'not as good as a laptop', and the relatively widespread use in vertical market industrial applications (including healthcare) has been largely unnoticed. I don't think Apple is going to break down any doors with revolutionary new uses. I think it's way too late. I see Apple (hopefully) as mainstreaming a product concept which has been hidden in vertical market niches. It looks like they are doing it with their usual stumbles.
Can the iPad do hand writing recognition?
Can the iPad do hand writing recognition?
No. Any reason why you'd need it in a device with a keyboard? (honest question).
There is no entrenched tablet market in Hospitals. The tablets you linked to are not used by many hospitals. I was part of a testing project for those, one of only 6 hospitals, this was a few years ago. They were heavy, needed recharging every 3 hours so you would need two per doctor and alternately charge them and they are too complex. They are also over $3000 each. You don't need full version of windows to replace a paper chart for rounding. You just need a report you can drill down. Far more widely used are PDA apps. But they are a little small. Just about every large EMR vendor has iPhone apps already, which shows there is a market there.
The thing is netbook based changes are getting into that part of the market as well. Getting 6-8 hours out of a netbook charge is nothing, and there are more touch screen convertable netbooks.
This is not an industrial work product but a lifestyle product. Some people might use software for it, but it is not going to be widely used as data collection, there is just too many compeating devices that will do the same job and more already on the market.
No. Any reason why you'd need it in a device with a keyboard? (honest question).
I am not suggesting data collection. I am talking about rounding, specifically. With maybe the ability to enter orders. You don't need anything sophisticated to do this. Go take a look what’s available in the iPhone store for Healthcare. EPIC Systems (the leader in EMR) have had a rounding tool for the iPhone for some time, that’s going to work on the iPad of course. But I am 100% confident we will see an app taking use of the bigger screen. I am already hearing Physicians talking about getting them to run this software on.
I really don't see netbooks in hospitals at all yet. Not for rounding. They just don't sit comfortably in a hand, without a table. Computers On Wheels are cumbersome, many Physicians want a small product to have basic access to the patients chart. Maybe we deal with different types of hospitals. I mainly work in large 400+ bed organizations and I see a bright future for it in Healthcare.
And, like I said before, I never claimed that there wasn't. All they need to do is to have people develop specific, highly specialised apps for this market, and the iPad has a market. It may even be better at doing some things than regular tablets that use generic, off-the-shelf software to to tasks that don't really need all of the features of a Word or an Excel.
Your data-collectors that use Excel to record data. Do they really need pivot tables, complex macros and formulas? Or are they just entering data into a table? With a little bit of effort you could have an app that just records the data you want it to record and nothing else. You could hire someone to write an app that suits your needs exactly, because there's absolutely no need for it to suit anyone else's. People already do that for the iPhone. They could do it for the iPad just as easily.
There's no way I'm getting one, by the way. I have no need for such a device, and many better things to be spending my money on.
"Workflow is the key to adoption and utilization in healthcare. I think the iPad will be a catalyst,” said Tom Herzog, VP IT and Medical Device Technologies.
“iPad will push healthcare away from the medical office and away from the desktop,” said Ted Eytan, Kaiser Permanente.
ablet solutions have a clear future (pdf) but as Apple tablet representatives were spotted at Los Angeles’ Cedars-Sinai Medical Center a few weeks ago, it seems iPad might have a shot in healthcare as well.
[snip]
I think iPad has the potential to become the No.1 healthcare tablet, but it has to go through plenty of changes and innovations in order to become a serious competitor in this race.
My general impression is that it is not perfect for healthcare, but it is closer than other devices I've tried.