Every one of these technologies was declared obsolete at some point. The surprising part is why millions of people are still ...
Rule of Professional Conduct 1.1 is titled “competence” for a reason. Yes, you have to know how to take a deposition, or ...
Long before fax machines became office staples, the concept of transmitting documents remotely was evolving. From Alexander Bain's 1843 patent to early 20th-century newspaper photo transmissions, the ...
Valve has already confirmed a summer 2026 window for its Steam Machine, and recent FCC filings pointed to June 29 as the rumored launch date. Now, a new leak suggests the hardware may already be in ...
Fax machines are old. They're susceptible to privacy breaches. But the N.W.T. health-care system still relies on them, and the health minister says that's not about to change. An early version of the ...
It's always interesting to look at technological development not just in terms of prospective future developments, but as the gigantic continuum of devices that preceded us. For example, the members ...
Maura Graber of Ontario’s famed Graber Olive House recently came across a long-forgotten empty file folder in their records with the name “Operation Desert Fax.” And that’s not a typo. It was the ...
Adam Harris is drawing a line between the AI that wins demos and the AI that runs a hotel at 2 a.m. without triggering a chargeback. For operators staring down agent-on-agent commerce, that ...
In the late 2000s, “mobile-first” emerged as a design discipline. The argument was a single sentence: don’t design for the big screen and squeeze it down. Start with the small screen, the harder ...
A lot of the conversation around AI in healthcare focuses on diagnostics and drug discovery or on doctor-patient visits. But a less visible part of the system affects whether patients actually get ...
In the age of AI, there's no reason the U.S. health system should be stuck in the analog era Fax machines are still ubiquitous in the American healthcare system. That needs to change, writes Paul ...
As the CEO of a healthcare company, I’m usually a dignified guy. I wear a tie. I go to board meetings. But I’m also a healthcare consumer — and I’m frustrated, as most people are, by the bureaucracy.