Recent Articles

  • Smart homes getting smarter: How interior designers must adapt

    Michael J. Berens Interior Design, Furnishings & Fixtures

    ​If you are not familiar with the term "the Internet of things," it is time to add it to your vocabulary. As became apparent during this year's Consumer Electronics Show, it won't be long before coordinating "the Internet of things" will be another task for designers to add to their project management plan.

  • Drug information education for practicing physicians: Part II

    Mike Wokasch Pharmaceutical

    As mentioned in my previous post, the recent announcement that GlaxoSmithKline would no longer pay physicians to do educational or promotional speaking about disease and prescription drugs got me thinking about the state of physician education, especially as it pertains to drug information. We talked about eliminating the potential for drug company bias and influence on physician prescribing practice by essentially "cleansing" the drug information development process of any financial support from drug companies.

  • Net neutrality: Free market will self‑regulate

    Victor Blake Communications

    A federal appeals court has made it clear that the FCC cannot regulate the carriage of traffic on the Internet for operators which the FCC itself deems are not common carriers. Of course, there is nothing preventing the FCC from declaring that Internet service providers are common carriers. If they did so, they could presumably go on to regulate carriage include not only policies (like "neutrality") but also pricing, bundling and other regulation.

  • 3-D printing taking center stage in additive manufacturing

    Don Rosato Manufacturing

    Additive manufacturing (AM) is a process of joining materials to make objects from 3-D model data, usually in successive layers, as opposed to subtractive manufacturing methodologies. The parts produced can be models, prototypes, tooling components, and increasingly, series production parts. They are generated from 3-D computer-aided design (CAD) data, medical scans, or data from 3-D scanning systems. Based on thin horizontal cross sections taken from a 3-D computer model, AM systems produce plastic, metal, ceramic, or composite parts, layer upon layer.

  • Wine tasting and RVing: Part 2

    Michael Charland Recreation & Leisure

    Traditionally, most writers and wine drinkers will focus on the Napa Valley area of California, which has some unbelievable wineries and great places to park your RV and go tasting. But other areas to take your RV may be less traveled while offering great wines and great scenery.

  • Who comes 1st? Customers or employees?

    Mel Kleiman Business Management, Services & Risk Management

    Who comes first, the customer or the employee? Some argue that running a business is pointless without customers and that making the customer happy comes first. One expert believes that having customers is pointless unless you have employees who will do their utmost every time to create a positive experience for your customers, so making your employees happy comes first.

  • Have a heart: A pharmacist’s reflection on medicine adherence

    Jason Poquette Pharmaceutical

    We know that compliance with prescribed medication therapies is embarrassingly low. So have a heart and teach your patients how to take their prescription medication. It's more important than you might think. In fact, results from a recent study suggest that greater adherence to prescribed therapies following an MI (myocardial infarction) significantly improve results and reduce readmissions to the hospital.

  • Early exit: Assessing when players are ready to make the leap

    Nick Merrill Sports & Fitness

    "I think I’m ready for the next level." Every coach has heard this at some point. It's a phrase signaling that your time instructing that player is coming to an end. You want the best for your players, but are they ready?

  • How to navigate the politics of medicine

    Karen Childress Healthcare Administration

    There are plenty of doctors who willingly — even excitedly — take on leadership roles that land them squarely in the middle of all kinds of interesting and challenging encounters within an organization. Thank goodness for them, because someone needs to be on the front line advocating for patients and members of the medical staff.

  • 4 ways to write headlines that actually get clicked

    Emma Fitzpatrick Marketing

    The short, snappy title you type right before you post your blog, tweet or story is the reason for your downfall. Even though headlines seem like the last step in publishing, they're the most important by far. If you have a ho-hum headline, no one will click on it to discover the golden editorial waiting for them. Instead, you need to really focus on crafting headlines that inspire and intrigue your audience enough to click through.