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Google Medicine Portables Technology

Ebola-Proof Tablet Developed By Google Set For Deployment In Sierra Leone 50

MojoKid writes Google has co-developed a tablet device for use by workers battling Ebola in Sierra Leone. The modified Sony Xperia tablet comes with an extra protective shell, and can withstand chlorine dousing as well as exposure to the high humidity and storms that are typical of life in West Africa. It can even be used by workers wearing protective gloves. Since even a single piece of paper leaving a high-risk zone poses a risk of passing on the infection, doctors on site at the height of the current outbreak of the disease were reduced to shouting patient notes to workers on the other side of a protective zone fence. Those workers would then enter the information into patient records. Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) technology advisor Ivan Gayton said this practice was "error prone, exhausting, and it wasted five or 10 minutes of the hour medics can spend fully dressed inside the protective zone before they collapse from heat exhaustion." To address the issue, MSF challenged a number of technology volunteers to create an "Ebola-proof tablet" to improve efficiency. This collective, which included Whitespell's Pim de Witte and Hack4Good's Daniel Cunningham, grew to include a member of Google's Crisis Response Team, and it was this group that co-developed the device.
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Ebola-Proof Tablet Developed By Google Set For Deployment In Sierra Leone

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  • by MichaelSmith ( 789609 ) on Saturday March 21, 2015 @05:45PM (#49310229) Homepage Journal

    Until recently I worked for a company which supplied industrial grade computers, including tablets. All the tablets we supplied ran windows. Google need to push hard to break into that market segment and developing a product like this is a good place to start.

    • +1 Informeresting.

      Although, since this comes from a house with no mods, that and five euros gets you a fancy cup of coffee at the Fivebucks.

  • Maybe I could use this tablet at work without the infection control officer (and charge nurse) complaining...

  • The tablet is doubtless cool! Restricting oneself to available hardware, the doctor could have a mike inside the suit, and the assistant could then easily take dictation outside.

  • Make a tablet so poor, no-one would touch it - hence, no ebola!

    I leave the culmination of the joke to the reader, for cross-platform mirth,

  • An Ebola proof computer? An anti-virus program that works in tropical climates and even when soaked in bodily fluids?

    Must have been developed by John Mcafee.

  • At least one version of the Sony Xperia tablet is waterproof. They also make a waterproof phone.
    The issue is chlorine breaks down the the seals. All Google had to do is replace the seals with a chlorine resistant compound.
    Xperia have a "glove" mode, so that takes care of that problem.
    The result is probably much cheaper than an industrial tablet, or computer.
  • It's the software on it. There are almost no applications for Android that works well in the medical field, all of them are windows based.

    They need to design good open source medical software not a ebola proof tablet that can be created in 20 minutes by anyone with a standard Samsung tablet and a waterproofing bag. Oh ebola on the tablet? dip it in this bleach bucket...... NEXT!

  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Saturday March 21, 2015 @07:11PM (#49310653) Journal

    Can't they just install anti-virus software?

  • Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)

    If you're going to write the name of the organisation, write it correctly.

  • It is a small handheld touch screen computer in a plastic shell. It is not a (medicinal) tablet that somehow protects workers from ebola.
  • Didn't know tablets could catch Ebola!

  • Rather pointles calling an inorganic object germ-proof, unless we're talking about some genetically engineered supergerm that eats plastic for breakfast.Hell, I can guarantee that my cheap China-branded keyboard is also Ebola-proof. Just don't mail it back to me. Incidentally the fine article makes no mention of Ebola-proof, simply that the tablet is resistant to the common chemicals used to disinfect objects suspected of being contaminated with Ebola. So strictly speaking the tablet is disinfectant/antise
  • There's a small, very important market for computers usable in biohazard situations. It's not easy making something functional that you can also guarantee can be completely disinfected.

    • It's not easy making something functional that you can also guarantee can be completely disinfected.

      OTOH, it might be easier to make something that is sufficiently functional to take (and transmit to a server, wirelessly) the data and is cheap enough to then be disposable by dumping in the incinerator (bleach pit, or whatever technology is most convenient). For example, a sheet of cellulose-based fibres impregnated with visual prompts and orientation marks on which further marks can be placed as the medic

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