Apple Watch May Make An Appearance During Fashion Week In Paris

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Paris is buzzing once again as Fashion Week is back in town. Everyone who is someone in the fashion industry is present in the French capital which plays host to one of the biggest industry events in the world. It looks like Apple may be showing off its own creation, the recently unveiled Apple Watch, in collaboration with Colette, a popular clothing and accessory retailer. Invites have been sent for an event organized by Apple and Colette that takes place tomorrow.

The invitation, which was first spotted by a French blog called Mac Generation, reads “Colette and Apple invite you to a one day only experience.” The invite itself doesn’t say if Apple’s smartwatch will be on display but there’s obvious similarity between the circular pattern on the invite and the Apple Watch’s user interface design.

It can not be said for sure right now if this event will purely be about the Apple Watch of if something else will be on the agenda as well. Presumably the events attendees will get a chance to tinker around with the Apple Watch which the company certainly wants to present as a fashionable accessory, and not just an extension of its mobile device experience.

The event takes place tomorrow in Paris between 11:00am and 7:00pm local time, we’ll have news coming out of the capital tomorrow so its not long before we know what exactly happened at the event.

Apple Watch May Make An Appearance During Fashion Week In Paris

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Improving the "Patient Experience" By Eliminating the Big Insurance Company

Health care provider organizations that are working directly with employers like Boeing –and cutting out the insurance company middlemen— believe they can do more than save money for those employers. They’re confident they can also improve both health care quality and service for workers and their families in ways that insurance companies cannot.

Employers are starting to realize that insurers might not be, as they have claimed, “part of the solution” to achieving a more patient-centered health care system. In fact, in some ways they have been part of the problem.

Providence-Swedish Health Alliance, a not-for-profit, hospital-based accountable care organization (ACO), will soon be providing both coverage and care to many Boeing employees, along with UW (University of Washington) Medicine–without an insurance firm. Officials at Providence-Swedish told me Boeing chose to work with them directly in part because of the firm’s desire to ensure their employees had a “better patient experience.” While cutting costs and improving quality of care were priorities, improving service and reducing hassles that have become synonymous with insurance company interactions was equally important to Boeing.

So Providence-Swedish has committed to a number of assurances and is even establishing a “concierge center” for Boeing employees. Among other things, the ACO has promised same-day or next-day appointments for urgent primary care visits and acute care, proactive support for preventive care and chronic disease management. The hub for all of this will be the concierge center, which patients can reach by phone, email or the Web.

While Boeing is contracting directly with Providence-Swedish and UW Medicine, the ACOs will have their own deals with insurance companies to provide back room services like claims processing. Dr. Joe Gifford, CEO of the Providence-Swedish ACO, told me his organization is working with Blue Cross of Illinois for that work. The federal government works with insurers in the same way to handle claims for Medicare beneficiaries.

Gifford also told me he’s in discussions with a number of other employers in the region that could result in similar deals–and even some that will include insurance companies, to some extent. And he noted that government entities, including Medicare and state governments, are following a similar path.

It’s a path that leads to what is often referred to as value-based care, a term that encompasses a spectrum of arrangements. What is common to all of the arrangements is a movement away from paying doctors and hospitals for individual treatments and diagnostic tests. In the deal with Boeing, for example, the aerospace company has given the ACOs a budget to provide all the care Boeing employees and dependents are likely to need in 2015.

In that sense, he said, “Boeing is treating us like an industrial supplier… and we are fully accountable” for costs and outcomes. That means that the ACOs will by necessity need to focus on keeping patients healthy and managing chronic conditions in the most cost-effective ways so as to prevent complications and reduce unnecessary hospitalizations.

Other hospitals are also taking on responsibilities that once were the complete domain of insurance companies. One example: the Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula in California, which earlier this year began offering its own Medicare Advantage plan to serve area seniors through a subsidiary called Aspire. “We think we can do a better job of meeting local needs than having a national company come in and tell us how to do it,” the company’s CEO, Scott Kelly, told the Monterey County Weekly.

This trend is not new. Many hospitals in the 1980s began operating their own HMOs to compete with insurance companies, but most of them failed, in large part because they didn’t have the actuarial and claims management expertise in-house they needed to stay solvent.

Learning from past mistakes, many of the hospitals and physician-led groups that are moving back into the health insurance market are hiring companies like Chicago-based Valence Health, a fast-growing firm that offers services ranging from claims adjudication to patient care coordination to more than 120 hospitals nationwide.

The number of employees at Valence has doubled to 325 over the past two years and is expected to grow by another 500 within five years. According to Kevin Weinstein, Valence’s chief marketing officer, that growth has been fueled by the movement away from fee-for-service medicine to value-based care in which health care providers are finding they have no alternative but to be more accountable for both cost and quality.

While the Affordable Care Act has been a catalyst for much of this change, employers like Boeing and other big payers of health care, including federal and state governments, will continue to drive it.

Photoshop heads (streaming) to Chromebooks

chomegaoaGoogle appears to have scored a rather significant hit with the cloud computing universe as they team with Adobe for streaming Photoshop. In the near future, users will be able to work with a full (streamed) version of Photoshop from their Chromebooks with Chrome OS, utilizing the full power of non-local computing and the web. If you’d like to try … Continue reading

Report: Apple working on 3 new iOS 8 updates

iOS-8-banner11-600x337Though iOS 8 was a good iteration of the mobile OS from Apple, building nicely on the aesthetic twist iOS 7 brought in, it lacks some punch. Certain aspects of iOS still go largely untouched, and the update itself can be a bit buggy. Now it seems three new updates to iOS are in the pipeline, and may be coming … Continue reading

BombSquad for Android Review

bombaIt’s time to get busy with the NVIDIA SHIELD Tablet and some super strange and super awesome fight game action with BombSquad. This game is all about you, the tiny little fighter, running around a variety of battlegrounds with intent on destruction. It’s radical. What you’re seeing here is a demonstration of the game played with the NVIDIA SHIELD Wireless … Continue reading

The Shoe Shine Boy will keep your favorite foot covering looking fancy

Shoe Shine Boy

If there’s one thing that can ruin your day, it’s having your favorite pair of shoes, bag, or wallet fall apart. Things that are made of leather often require care, but there aren’t nearly as many repair shops for these types of items in existence anymore. We buy things halfway expecting them to break within the next few months, or as early as the day after our purchase.

The main two aspects in this of course are time and money. It’s far easier to buy several cheaper items than having to save up for one big purchase, and that being your only option (which needs additional time and attention every now and again). Shoes are probably the hardest to keep up with, since they see the most use. If you don’t mind wearing the same pair so long as they look up to snuff, then you might want to get a Shoe Shine Boy. This is not an actual person of course, but is a handheld buffer that will return your shoes to their original glory. Of course, this will work decently on any leather product, so don’t just stop at your shoes!

This comes with a leather protection cream, black shoe polish, clear shoe polish, a shining device, shoe brush, 2 AA batteries, and 10 microfiber pads. The pads are what you would put the creams or polish on, but make sure you’re using the right color. No one wants to put brown polish on a pair of black shoes or vice versa. This will cost you $43.99, and though it will certainly help to keep the accessories you have in top order, you will still have to put in time to keep them that way.

Available for purchase on TouchOfModern

 
[ The Shoe Shine Boy will keep your favorite foot covering looking fancy copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

LEGO DOOM is a Game That Should Happen

Forget cutesy LEGO games like Indiana Jones, I want LEGO DOOM. I loved DOOM on the PC, even though it scared the crap out of me regularly and made me jump like a child. I think DOOM is one of the most memorable of all the shooters I played back in the day.

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Iain Heath (aka Ochre_Jelly) is a fan of both LEGO and DOOM, and he used those two loves to create some awesome dioramas. Everything from the  monsters in the game to the hero are recreated complete with flying fireballs and more. That cacodemon is incredible.

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Be sure to watch the video to see the dioramas up close. Fantastic job, Iain!

[via Kotaku]

Mophie’s Samsung Galaxy S5 Juice Pack Gives You Ample Smartphone Life

samsung-gs5-mophie-case Mophie has a new Juice Pack out, designed for the Galaxy S5. The case packs a huge 3,000 mAh battery within its glossy shell, which is slightly larger than the 2,850 mAh unit within the Galaxy S5 itself. True, you could carry around a spare battery for the GS5 and pop the back whenever you want more power, but the Mophie’s extra juice is just a switch away, and it includes passthrough… Read More

For Those About To Rock The Jamstik, We Salute You

scaled-4674 I love stringed MIDI instruments. After messing with the gTar two years ago I’ve been looking for the perfect portable MIDI device that allows me to meld my inability to play keyboards with my sub-par guitar skills. Perhaps I’ve finally found my perfect match. We first met the Jamstik last year and I’ve been waiting to get my hands on a unit since. The team is finally… Read More

How to Choose a Reliable Emergency Radio (and Some Good Ones to Buy)

How to Choose a Reliable Emergency Radio (and Some Good Ones to Buy)

With luck, you’ll never need to rely on an emergency radio, but they’re an essential part of any emergency kit. However, not all emergency radios are alike, and buying a reliable one isn’t as simple as plucking one from the shelves. Here’s what to look for, and some good options for your emergency kit.

Read more…