Love this ‘self-help’ book to reframe where you might need to compete for profit or where it can be competitive/play for fun.
But more importantly to interpret the competitive behavior of others and identify where its not even necessary to compete at all. Because you can choose to play a different level of game than those around you. (Hint: its usually people playing too small finite win/lose games that you’d like to not engage with wherever possible)
Played around with this in my soon-to-be previous health-tech job and its great.
Actually the entire hl7-fhir ( https://www.hl7.org/fhir/ ) standard seems to me quite solid.
It would be wonderful if a new cohort of start-ups would leverage it to drastically improve the digital UX of healthcare generally.
That would be great except that the 8,000 lb gorillas of the medical data industry, at least as of a year or two ago, did next to nothing to really make their EHR's FHIR-compatible. Getting even some of the very basics on their demo environments were fundamentally broken.
Yeah so many cards stacked against potential start-ups who could potentially bring some quality to the industry :/
Curious to see though that Google cloud / AWS etc are building fhir store APIs.
Love what the team over there does with these web demos. They previously made this amazing interactive synthesizer learning resource: https://learningsynths.ableton.com/
Also a bit disappointed in the article that it doesn’t connect the dots between WIAM and CIAM for B2B. One companies customer is another companies workforce.
Many of the apps you want to have for your workforce are actually third party, but you want to give SSO etc with an employee account. These saas apps need to not only provide CIAM ala “sign in with google” but allow the Customer to set up the connection with the WIAM to give employees access.
Its got people's attention. Both techies and heavy users of social media are aware of it, and maybe experiment with it. That is in essence the major win. Its no longer obscure.
In the reactions you can see all the typical traits of a new thing that comes to shake up a stagnant status quo. From naive excitement to cynical disbelief.
When somethig is doomed and wins at the same time you could say its a time of high drama.
Agreed, the critical article does raise some good points that these more decentralized/fedarated/self-hosted/self-custody protocols need to incorporate in their designs at some point of they really want to scale to challenge the current status quo of social media.