Warung Bebas

Rabu, 07 November 2012

Download Internet Download Manager 6.12 Final Build 23


Unik Informatika - Internet Download Manager atau disebut juga IDM adalah downloader manager shareware. Menurut pengamatan saya, software ini merupakan software unggulan dan favorit untuk mendownload sesuatu di Internet, baik anda maupun saya sendiri.

http://unik-informatika.blogspot.com/2012/11/download-internet-download-manager-612.html
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Nah, sekarang sudah rilis versi barunya yaitu 6.12 Final Build 23 yang dirilis pada tanggal 26 Oktober 2012, yang akan saya bagikan yang Full Version + Optimizer nya, nah ada sedikit trik untuk mempercepat software ini, bisa anda baca pada : Cara Mempercepat Internet Download Manager (IDM)

What's new in version 6.12 Final Build 23 : 

- Fixed a critical bug in IE integration module
- Improved Chrome and Opera integration
- Fixed crashing in Chrome IDM integration module

Untuk link download nya silahkan anda pilih diantara 3 link berikut :
Mediafire : Download !
Dropbox : Download !
Indowebster : Download !

Ada sedikit permasalahan namun sudah ada solusinya :

Masalah : Jika menggunakan IDM versi 6.12 Average CPU Usagenya tinggi sampai menimbulkan masalah crash atau mungkin saja IDM lambat atau masalah yang lain.

Solusi : coba install IDMShellExtReplacer versi lama dari IDM tersebut. Untuk link nya bisa di download DISINI dan DISINI !

Bad Health IT -Yet Another Health IT 'Glitch' - Potential Image Loss in GE Centricity PACS; ECRI Again Reports Health IT a Top Ten Hospital Risk

From my definition of bad health IT (BHIT) at this link:

Bad Health IT ("BHIT") is defined as IT that is ill-suited to purpose, hard to use, unreliable, loses data or provides incorrect data, causes cognitive overload, slows rather than facilitates users, lacks appropriate alerts, creates the need for hypervigilance (i.e., towards avoiding IT-related mishaps) that increases stress, is lacking in security, compromises patient privacy or otherwise demonstrates suboptimal design and/or implementation.  

Considering the problem of lost data (lost x-rays) that affects not one, but two versions ("versions 3.x and 4.x and higher") of a common GE PACS (radiology image management) system, as in the attached memo to hospital radiology and IT executives, one might ask:

  • How long has this been going on before this 'glitch' was discovered? 
  • What validation and safety testing does GE use before releasing its health IT to production? 
  • Why was it discovered in several successive versions of PACS systems being used on live patients, instead of in laboratory testing?
      • How many delayed diagnoses, injuries and/or deaths might have occurred as a result of this "disappearing image" bug?
      • What is the likelihood this "workaround" will be uniformly adopted in short order?  
      • What levels of hypervigilance, stress and increased likelihood of error will this temporary "workaround" engender?
      • When will it be fixed in all implementations worldwide?


         Beware disappearing x-rays.  Make sure every system user performs this workaround, too (click to enlarge).


        Page 2 (click to enlarge)

        It's not as if missing x-rays are a trivial matter.  One routine x-ray lost to followup resulted in the needless and rather horrible death of an infant, and a $1.5 million settlement, as at the June 2011 link "Babies' deaths spotlight safety risks linked to computerized systems" (case #2).

        Patient safety is being compromised.

        Lack of regulation of health IT, and lack of reporting and accountability, needless to say, are major contributors to the prevalence of BHIT.

        I also note for several years running, including in the latest report of 2013, the ECRI Institute (an independent tester of healthcare technology) reports health IT-related problems as among the top ten technology problems in hospitals (link to report):

        ...Five of the top 10 hazards explained in ECRI Institute’s [2013] report are:

            1.  Alarm hazards
            2.  Medication administration errors using infusion pumps
            3.  Unnecessary radiation exposures and radiation burns during diagnostic radiology
                 procedures
            4.  Patient/data mismatches in EHRs and other health IT (HIT) systems
            5.  Interoperability failures with medical devices and health IT systems

        Three of the ten topics on the 2013 list are directly associated with the still-maturing [i.e., experimental - ed.] health IT field where the interplay between complexity and effectiveness and potential harm is most evident; several of the other topics are peripherally related to HIT issues.

        “The inherent complexity of HIT-related medical technologies, their potential to introduce new failure modes, and the possibility that such failures will affect many patients before being noticed—combined with federal incentives to meet Meaningful Use requirements—leads us to encourage healthcare facilities to pay particular attention to health IT when prioritizing their safety initiatives for 2013,” says James P. Keller, Jr., vice president, health technology evaluation and safety, ECRI Institute.

        The hazards included in the 2013 list, published in the November 2012 issue of ECRI Institute’s Health Devices journal, met one or all of the following criteria: it has resulted in injury or death; it has occurred frequently; it can affect a large number of individuals; it is difficult to recognize; it’s had high-profile, widespread news coverage.

        -- SS

        It’s high time we start treating actual DISEASE rather than risk factors anyway.

        I’m currently on a personal quest to find the answers to these questions [why his lipid profile has gone from almost normal to nightmare territory after 7 years of LLVLC] and more by speaking directly with as many of my expert friends in the medical, nutrition and research fields over the next six months researching and writing my book all about this topic tentatively titled A Patient’s Guide to Understanding Your Cholesterol Test Results (releasing Fall 2013). People are so confused about what to believe about their cholesterol test results that this book is way overdue. Arming people with solid information will help them make a more informed decision about what to do about the current state of their health rather than blindly following some dubious drug therapy promoted by their doctor to treat risk factor numbers. It’s high time we start treating actual DISEASE rather than risk factors anyway.
        ~ Jimmy Moore 


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