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" ... Healthcare delivery and practice, in spite of significant consolidation over the past decade, remain local phenomena. We’ve made great strides in making health information electronic and computable — imagine just over a decade ago, we were pushing for the adoption of electronic health record systems and for doctors to stop using paper charts. Unfortunately, those systems were built to bill and document, rather than support high-quality care. Now is the time to revisit how technology can support the quadruple aim of higher quality, lower costs, better outcomes and better provider satisfaction. ... "
" ... Imagine all of the information ever created by humanity fitting in the volume of an RV, lasting a hundred thousand years and always being computable. Something as new and revolutionary as this demands new ways of thinking in evaluating both the technology and its potential impact. Borrowed metrics from classical data storage systems are not nearly enough to understand and assess because a new model is required. Above all, one must resist the temptation to fixate on a single figure of merit, such as time or cost per byte stored. As was the case with quantum and supercomputers, there is so much more to this story than how quickly and cheaply data can be put into this medium. ... "
" ... In the theoretical field, he is remembered most for the Turing test - the test by which an artificial intelligence could be determined to be successful by its ability to fool a human into thinking that they were talking to a human. Although the test has been devalued by the discovery that most people, when asked to communicate online, sound like badly-programmed AIs, it remains a useful theoretical tool. Perhaps more important, though, was his supposition that a computing device could do anything that was computable. This sounds absurdly self-evident now, but that's because you are reading this on a device that is able to pretend to be a calculator, a typewriter, a Jeffries tube, a VAX terminal and so on ad nauseam. ... "
" ... The question, in hundreds of variations, has been answered hundreds of times. π is a finite number. It is irrational. It is computable. It is finitely definable. It has “a pattern”. Some of its representations (the poor ones) require infinitely many characters. Plenty of other representations (the much better ones) only require finitely many. ... "