btw2
btw.net is about this digital age and its divides and finding paths to collaboration.
btw2.net is about a particular area of digital divides - those where aging becomes a divide.
Of particular interest are two questions for Baby Boomers:
  1. How do you help yourselves as the digital era accelerates?
    (Think of the starship blurring away from you)
  2. How do you help your partent and their generation as the digital era accelerates?
    (What starship? What are they talking about?)
  3. (optional) How do you link to (communicate with) the younger generations?
    (Mashup? What's that? It sounds messy. It sounds dirty.
    Web 2.0? What's that? It includes Mashup? That sounds sticky.
    That's a good thing? Really? Why?)
Now, about this pain here.... What do you....


If your purpose is only about you, it has no branches.
If it is only about the rest of the world, it has no roots.
Dawna Markova

btw2.net

 





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  Saturday, November 12, 2005


An article on Yahoo buying Flickr leads to more about "The network is the computer."



The first step to helping from a distance is digitally knowing the landscape where the help is needed.
Even when you don't know what resources are in that community.

This involves learning the online tools to find and converse with available local support.
The first step.... [continues]

9:48:53 AM    comment []

I think this was published before the current flurry of concern over so many choices.

Prescription for Change
by Gary Ahlquist, David Knott, and Philip Lathrop, Strategy+Business, Fall 2005
 
Health plans that put consumers in the driver's seat are the last chance to avoid a government-controlled monopoly.

...It has long been recognized that these trends are unsustainable. Each of the major players associated with health care has taken its turn trying to rationalize demand and costs in the United States. Health-care providers (both institutions, such as hospitals, and individual professionals), employers, insurers, and government programs all took their swings with little lasting impact. Now comes the last group: consumers. During the next year or two, consumers will get a chance to reshape the system through a form of insurance called consumer-directed health plans (CDHPs), which have been written about at length but not implemented until recently. If this solution fails, it is hard to see any alternative but a government-sponsored "universal" initiative -- perhaps not nationalizing assets, but almost certainly involving price controls, supply constraints, and utilization mandates.

But before we abandon private-sector initiatives entirely, it's worth doing what we can to give CDHPs a fighting chance. They have the potential not only to transform health-care markets, but also to become part of new thinking about larger issues such as retirement savings, wealth-building in general, and even large government programs such as Social Security and Medicare. For the first time, in short, consumers could be given the lead role in shaping the health system of the future -- which in turn would give providers and insurers of health care their first real incentive to transform. The next few years will be crucial in determining whether CDHPs can spark a new paradigm for health care, or whether we[base ']re simply taking another step toward what is, to many, an inevitable nationalized approach....

[strategy+business]


8:17:00 AM    comment []


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