Posts Tagged ‘Harvard Medical School’

Google Zeitgeist, Boston edition: I seem to be missing something

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Google released their list of fastest rising search terms for 2009 — nationally, Michael Jackson took the top spot. Jacko was followed by some unsurprising terms — Facebook, Twitter, Lady Gaga, Windows 7 — and some things I don’t know what they are — “tuentro,” “sanalika,” “dantri.com.vn” and “torpedo gratis.” Even searching those words just now didn’t really help. I might just need more coffee.

Local results don’t make much more sense. At No. 1, we have “BU student link,” which I figured was about BU student/accused prostitute killer Philip Markoff, but is instead an actual Boston University student services web site.

No. 2: “eCommons.” This one also has nothing to do with killing anybody, and is also a college student service web site — Harvard Medical School’s this time. We might have too many college kids around here.

At No. 3: “Gloucester Daily Times,” which I’ll bet shocked even the Gloucester Daily Times. This is the year after the 2008 Time Magazine story about the “pregnancy pact” that either happened or didn’t, and its interminable fallout.

Restaurant Week” and “BHCC” at Nos. 3 and 4, respectively, seem reasonable enough, with the recession making expensive restaurants less, and community colleges more popular. “UMB.edu” follows at No. 6, which seems a little like calling someone to ask for their phone number.

MBTA Commuter Rail,” “7News Boston,” “WBZ TV” and “Coolidge Corner Theater” finish off the list. Nothing weird there, but where’s “David Ortiz“? The guy had a season-opening slump that almost killed half the local population, and then had a positive drug test leaked. I don’t even know who you people are any more.

Having trouble finding H1N1? Harvard Medical School releases Swine Flu tracking app

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Harvard Medical School has developed a H1N1-tracking iPhone app. The app is a project of HMS Mobile, which sounds like a British Navy ship, but says it’s a Harvard Medical group dedicated to helping people deal with day-to-day health emergencies.

Also — that’ll be two bucks. Just around the corner, those anti-capitalist hippies at Children’s Hospital, working with the MIT Media Lab, released their own, free H1N1 tracking app last month.

That’s two H1N1 apps sprouting from about one city block — If things keep up like this, pretty soon you should be able to use your mobile phone to track H1N1 germs chasing you down the street in real-time, or see the normally invisible H1N1 crawling over people’s faces in an augmented reality app, exposing them as the feverish, congested zombies they are.

iPhone 3GS SEO party: Lovely day for a giant line

Friday, June 19th, 2009
Thos Niles hands a brochure to iphone buyer Aaron Perrino outside Boston’s Apple Store.

Thos Niles hands a brochure to iphone buyer Aaron Perrino outside Boston’s Apple Store.

Lines in the Back Bay, lines in Chestnut Hill, lines in New York — Apple might end up creating a market for MIT $100K startup InstantQ all by itself.

Second Rotation, an online reseller of used iPhones and other gadgets, was handing out t-shirts for its Gazelle.com service outside the Boylston St. Apple Store.

No appearances yet by FitnessKeeper CEO/gigantic anthropomorphic iPhone Jason Jacobs — he’s waiting on Apple to approve a new build of his RunKeeper app.

Meanwhile, Harvard Medical School CIO John Halamka talks about the iPhone for health care IT, including an app that delivers patient data to smartphones.

Video of Jacobs running the Boston Marathon in an iPhone suit after the jump.

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