ONE: I told them it was stupid to rent the same cabin in the woods where that other slaughter took place, twenty years ago. I said I knew of a perfectly good bed and breakfast where nobody had ever been slaughtered, not even once.

For those in this thread seeing this behavior, do you notice any consistencies when this happens? (always at night, snowing, always on outside cameras, always on all cameras etc.)? Consider temporarily relocating the camera (ideally inside in a fairly controlled environment), do you still see the same behavior?


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To clarify my issue, besides the camera recording when no one is there (which is only at night time by the way), I also notice that I get 1 or 2 extra recordings when I "live" view the camera or it records true motion.

I took the ToC out, but l left the Heading style in place at the top of each chapter. I converted to ePub through Calibre, and the result had no ToC.

My original solution - generating a ToC in LibreOffice in the normal way - worked fine when converted to ePub. There was the ToC in the ebook working nicely. The only thing wrong was the presence of page numbers which, of course, in the e-book were meaningless. I just want rid of those page numbers. Can I create a ToC without page numbers?

Zume Life is a San Jose start-up founded in 2006 that has developed its own dedicated device that allows those with chronic illnesses, their caretakers, or anyone with a complex regimen to keep track of and manage their own care. Last week mobihealthnews caught up with Zume Life's CEO Rajiv Mehta to discuss where primary caregivers fit into Zume Life's product, why "bucketized" approaches to mHealth applications won't work and why he's tired of hearing about how consumers will "never" pay for eHealth services.

mobihealthnews: Zume Life has created a device, called the Zuri, that helps patients keep track of their medications, daily habits, exercise and any other activity. While there is an option to send the collected data to a website accessible by other interested parties, like caregivers, the solution seems mostly consumer-oriented. So, how do the caregivers fit into the Zume Life equation?

Mehta: One of the key things to think about in terms of caregivers--first and foremost, for at least 99 percent of our lives, the primary caregiver is you. There is no way around it. Nobody else has much to say about what you eat, whether you sleep and so on. Past that, there's a tiny circle of friends and family who are really your next level of caregivers and are really involved more than anybody else--it could be your spouse, your sister, you best friend. Yes, of course, there are the health professionals: whether dietitians, physicians or nurses--but just they are involved rarely--usually when things go wrong at an annual checkup. Keeping that in mind, the way caregivers are involved is through this data that is collected by the Zuri and presented on the Web. With the user's permission, other people can view that individual's health and over time start setting up automatic alerts... When you go to the doctor with some minor problem, it's very difficult to diagnose and treat because they just don't have the level of data to treat you. So at least with this solution, there is the possibility that they could get that useful data.

Mehta: I think [mobile is an attractive strategy] because of the nature of the user's problem. You have to be with the user to help them. For example, with reminders, it really doesn't do us much good if a person needs to remember to go to their PC and find that piece of information there: "Oh, at this moment I'm suppose to take two doses of aspirin." We live our lives everywhere and so for the day-to-day and hour-to-hour activities of recording your health, it has to be at your fingertips. It doesn't in a sense preclude a Web-based application at all, especially since some of our handhelds are getting more capable of going directly to the Web. The point is simply that the information has to be at the fingertips. And so, it's a "mobile" device in the sense that it has to be with you--in today's world, that means it has to be some sort of little device we are pursuing both approaches: specialized devices as well as smartphone applications because different users will have different desires in terms of how they want this application to exist for them.

Mehta: We currently have a closed beta version of an iPhone app. That said, there is no generalized app for all cell phones, but we plan to watch and learn and see which of these emerging mobile platforms become popular. It really is important that we ensure these applications are designed well so people can use them. Keep coming back to the point; Taking your pill is not hard. Eating your broccoli is not hard. Taking ten minutes to go for a walk isn't hard. It's fitting them into a very busy day. The activity needs to be trivial. A great deal of care needs to go into the design of the whole UI to make it trivial.

Mehta: Every other patient-focused, consumer-focused health solutions we have come across--whether it's a telehealth solution from HealthHero, Philips or websites like PatientsLikeMe or FitDay.com or other mobile phone solutions--they almost always come from the perspective of the healthcare industry. So these solutions are very often bucketized. Their solutions become pegged as offerings for people with diabetes or people with ALS and so forth. If you are a diabetic, yes, you should be keeping track of your glucose, yes, you should be keeping track of your insulin and carb counting and so forth. Most of our competitors just create a solution for that. We think that this just doesn't work for us as individuals because even in the simplest cases we have multiple things to deal with. For example, two-thirds of diabetics have another chronic illness in addition to diabetes. Twenty-five percent of diabetics have two or more conditions in addition to diabetes. These "bucketized" approaches end up being not particularly useful to us as individuals. It doesn't help us to have four solutions to manage our health--we need one solution to manage our health.

Mehta: There are a few cultural perceptions that really need to change for us to really make headway on this. One that you hear over and over again when you show consumer oriented health applications to almost anyone is: "Consumers Don't Care about their health, how are you going to be able to get them to do anything?" Parallel to that is: "Consumers won't pay for this." This is a myth that's just got to be busted. When we look at it that way--people don't care about their health--it's impossible to make any progress when you assume that the dog doesn't want to eat the dog food. I think it's un-motivating for the industry to go on about this and I also thing that it's fundamentally untrue. That's a really key social perception that needs to change for anything to really happen. We all do pay for health--we pay $100B in the U.S. each year alone on things we think are good for our health. We just object to people telling us what to spend on. If this is meant to help me, then make it good enough so that I want to pay for it. Don't tell me advertisers or the insurance companies will pay for it. Anyway, I'm off my soapbox.

Great work Tommy (as usual!)


Like you, I don't like Wordpress at all. Very clumsy without massive coding knowledge IMO. Even though it's everywhere. I have had several clients asking for "login" details, so they can make changes to websites I've created. I'm always hesitant: 1. They can totally mess up designs if they don't know what they're doing, and 2. It's often the beginning of the end of my relationship with them, when they think they can do things themselves!


Your page implies that I would have to give account access details to anyone who logs in "online". That's OK if it's a friend but not if it's a client. It also looks complex to explain to a client, if I'm honest.


Is there anything out there that is an equivalent to the JOCMS plug-in (I think that's what it was called?). I believe it's dead now. It would allow text and image changes on single pages and was pretty easy to use - so no messing with the website design, and not quite enough information for the client to think they can "web design" without me! 589ccfa754

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