Hi! I’m one of the great students working on this. This is merely a request to get more visibility. It will also help us get more grants. We don’t have any intention of restricting the “openness” of it.
My worry is verification of facts. What if the model summarized incorrect facts, and it gets added to the medical history? How can doctors easily verify and fix things?
Have you had a medical billing experience recently? They don't care about facts, they care about maximizing the bill subject to plausibility constraints.
I fear that LLMs will kick this to a whole new level :(
It’s easier to revise than to write a first draft. It’s possible to miss mistakes on review, but relatively, I think it’s more likely that a distracted human will mess something up on the first draft.
A good benchmark could be to compare the accuracy of generated notes to the accuracy of other currently accepted practices like human medical scribes and assistants.
Thanks for your comment. We clearly show a diff to the doctor before updating patient records. We are very explicit that they should check it (and edit if necessary).
I've used Bitwarden at Lastpass and Keypass in the past and found all of them much worse at their sync and ability to integrate with websites or OS to paste my passwords, not to mention how many of them required either a subscription to them or to Dropbox or the like to keep your passwords synced across devices.
Not even that. Just consider how long it took for the government to make any kind of movement on the issue, regardless of whether it was some likely watered down toothless action or not. So, retroactively the cost was some fraction of $141M over the years they've gotten away with their practices and it is also safe to assume that they would likely just offset that cost over some period into the future, i.e., 10 years of past profit + 10 years until the mid point to the next government action, over $141M ... which they will make up by upping the price as they have clearly been doing on a regular basis.
On that note. We should be telling everyone about freetaxusa.com (no affiliation other than having tried it). I can't recall the exact cost structure, but it's on the order of $25 to do federal and state returns with investment income, and file both electronically. That's in comparison to what I think is around $100 for the equivalent using TurboTax.
its also free under ~50k AGI, though it did keep trying to upsell me to the paid version, the free file program is pretty readily available from many providers. but they all do the type of thing that they just slapped intuit's wrists for and try to trick you into needing to pay when using free file, or trick you into your "free" taxes only being federal
They were, but have stopped talking about that for years. The project is probably canceled; I've heard Jim Keller talk about how that work was happening simultaneously with Zen 1.
Full GUI support is available now in preview, so by the time Windows 11 launches, it should be ready for mainstream support. It uses Wayland and RDP natively. I haven't seen any announcement of if this will be used for the Android support layer, but it will likely be using something similar.