Showing posts with label web2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label web2. Show all posts

Monday, May 14, 2007

Disaster Prepareness using Web-based tools

I put another paper online:
Web-tools as potential assistance to Public Health Preparedness and response tasks.

Abstract

Faced with the prospect of natural and man-made emergencies for public health, it is worthwhile to see whether any of the new software tools might help. The new "web-2" tools have changed in a surprising way - they are easier and more fun to use. These tools are often free of charge, require no installation, consume no disk-space, and require no IT-department support -- all of which meet constraints that public health workers have faced in the past. The focus of these new tools is on cost, agility, simplicity, ease-of-use, and collaborative work. This paper reviews what tools are available, and how they might fit into the set of public health tool-box. Finally, training issues and other barriers to adoption are assessed, with an eye to figuring out what University-based Disaster Preparedness centers might do to make this technology legitimate, more accessible, and better utilized.

There's also a discussion of rules-based "plan generators" instead of "plans" in the appendix.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

China closing on US in number of internet users

According to China Daily, January 24, 2007, the number of internet users in China is
poised to pass the number in the USA within two years. The article goes on:

China is expected to overtake the United States to have the world's largest Internet population within two years, a quasi-government organization said yesterday.

The country had 137 million Internet users by the end of last year, an increase of 23.4 percent year-on-year, according to a biannual report released by the China Internet Networks Information Centre (CNNIC).

"The growth is now gaining much momentum. We are expecting even faster growth in 2007 and 2008 given that Internet penetration now has exceeded 10.5 percent in the country," said Wang.

The CNNIC report found that Internet access in China is going increasingly broadband and mobile. The country had 90.7 million broadband users by 2006, up 41.1 percent year-on-year. And about 17 million mobile phones users are now using their handsets to access the Web.

Mao Wei, director of CNNIC, said an increasingly mobile liifestyle in China could help spark an even bigger Internet boom.

The growth of China's Internet population could get a boost after the country rolls out 3G (third generation) mobile telephony, which promises faster Internet access and downloads of data-heavy services such as videos, the director said.

China had 461 million mobile phone users by the end of 2006, according to statistics released by the Ministry of Information Industry on Monday.

With user penetration hitting 10 percent, the Internet would create a vast array of opportunities for businesses.

Morgan Stanley anticipates escalated industry consolidation in China's Internet sector this year, with "market share shifting to a few market leaders" such as NASDAQ-listed Sina Corp, Sohu.com, Baidu, Hong Kong-listed Tencent and unlisted Alibaba.