Friday, October 30, 2009
Minute Clinic
Minute Clinic at CVS rules! I went in today for a flu shot and was very pleasantly surprised. Actually, it reminded me of my visit to another Minute Clinic location 2 years ago - I also went in for a flu shot and also walked out smiling and surprised at how nice and effortless and well thought-out the entire process was. It's an experience that is entirely different from all other healthcare-related interactions you would typically deal with. Little to no wait. Smiling, likable, nice personnel. In-and-out - exactly how I like my interactions with healthcare system to be, if I must interact with it. Also, on the geeky side - their IT is very impressively done. You register at a kiosk outside - touch-screen PC with good (not excellent, but good) interface walks you through a few screens of demographics and typical questionnaire about your allergies, etc. Quick and painless. There's a question about whether you like to get access to your records and you need to provide your e-mail address if that is what you want. One I got home, there was an e-mail waiting with instructions to click on a link to verify my identity. Another nice touch - I had to enter a code found on my paper visit receipt which I was given upon leaving the clinic - this way the system was able to not only verify my ownership of the e-mail, but also verify my identify, but in a completely unobtrusive and seamless way! Once I completed the simple registration process online, I saw the records from both of my visits to Minute Clinic - complete with all information, even including vaccine lot numbers! In addition, there were two buttons - one for exporting my records into Google Health and another for Microsoft HealthVault. As easy as clicking a button - literally! Pleasant, simple, transparent - overall two thumbs up. If only they had H1N1 vaccine there...
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Russification of Macintosh
My venerable Russification of Macintosh site has not been updated in a while, mostly due to the fact that the free hosting provider has been ignoring my pleas to restore access to the files. There've been some recent developments and I wanted to make sure that my fellow Russian-speaking computer users have uninterrupted access to the wisdom and goodness that is the Russian phonetic keyboard layout. Hence this update in my blog.
If you are a Mac user, things have gotten substantially easier since I originally started providing information about getting your Mac to "type" in Russian. Macs come with all the necessary pieces in place - fonts, keyboard layouts, applications that are ready to deal with Cyrillic alphabets right out of the box. One crucial thing is still missing, however - if you are not familiar with key layout in a standard Russian typewriter, you will find it difficult to use Apple-supplied Russian keyboard layouts. This is where my phonetic keyboard layout comes in - it makes it to super-easy to type in Russian because majority of letters are arranged in such a way as to correspond phonetically with latin keys on your keyboard. Here's what my keyboard layout looks like:
There are two things that prompted me to make this update in my blog - first, keyboard layout files are no longer available for download from the original website; and second - MacOS X 10.6 "Snow Leopard" finally did away with old way of specifying keyboard layouts in favor of newfangled XML-based files. I made a quick version of my layout in the new format and have been testing it for a while; it is now ready for wider audience.
Dear users, please enjoy!
Keyboard Layout for MacOS X 10.6 "Snow Leopard" and above
Keyboard Layout for MacOS X 10.2 "Jaguar" to 10.5 "Leopard"
- CapsLock up -> Latin
- CapsLock down -> Cyrillic
Keyboard Layout for Windows
Now you can have the same easy-to-use phonetic keyboard layout you came to trust on your Mac when using Windows. I understand that you would rather be using your Mac, but sometimes we simply have no control over these things. So while you have to put up with Windows, at least you do not have to put up with a typewriter-style keyboard layout!
Should be compatible with Windows 2000 and XP (limited testing performed on XP only)
Instructions
Configure XP
"Details..."
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
What's the difference between a "disc" and a "disk?"
Did you ever wonder about the difference between a "disc" and a "disk?" Find out by reading a recent Apple's KnowledgeBase article.
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Create custom keyboard layouts with Ukelele | MacFixIt - CNET Reviews
MacFixIt has a writeup on using Ukelele utility to create your own keyboard layouts for the Mac: Create custom keyboard layouts with Ukelele | MacFixIt - CNET Reviews
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