What would you do with a 100mbit/s or 1Gbit/s connection?

  • Thread starter Thread starter mgcarley
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Exactly. It's a good business opportunity. For teleradiology (Teleradiology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia) bandwidth has always mattered. That means for a doctor based in India, he needs to be board certified from US (if he's interested in working with US based hospitals) and be covered by their regulatory bodies (it holds true for most of the other hospitals elsewhere). They have their Health Information Privacy laws (Health Information Privacy) but then in your case only the bandwidth equation comes. For me, my job is to work only on the images and evaluate the plans based on the images (which takes up huge amounts of data); it should not attract these "laws" so as to say. The field is virgin and I don't know of anyone doing this. May be perhaps soon, I would want something on this count and it is a easily workable solution to work from home.

The big question would come if and when you want to locally cache the images (or data) to improve the response times or move some of the storage to your data center. It would be a tricky issue then because there is nothing, to my knowledge, to regulate. Although, since I am speaking from a layman's perspective at present, I need to work on this aspect later. Maybe a publication on this count can be worked out :)

Oh by the way, HIPAA compliance is a real pain in the ass or so that I heard. No one wants to be sued for hundreds of millions of dollars because the "privacy" has been breached.But tele-radiology (like outbound calls from US to India for "call centres) provides for a real "cost cutting measure".
 
Avoid doing so if you have some imp. stuff on those servers.
many advanced data centers (US Based) have a system where they can easily detect incoming pirated stuff, and you can loose the server on such copyright infringement.
no matter it was downloaded as a test or fun, copyrighted material would violate the A.U.P. which is enough for closure of the account.

its server bassed on germany so noprob with pirated stuffs!!! only in us you get all those restricting laws!!!
 
I think Google TV sources content for IP based addresses; perhaps content meant for US may not be visible to you. Or unless you wish to take a US based VPN and then stream videos to your TV which is possible :)
 
i dont think google tv would have any issues working in india. the problem would of course be getting content to work through it. youtube would work of course. but for other content sites... you would need a workaround. anyways, almost every media company in USA is blocking access to google tv... fox, abc, cbs and nbc. :D
 
Despite my own views about watching TV over the Internet (it's not very creative use, IMO), I think Google should forget about this project for the USA and leave the various companies to bitch & sue each other (well... really themselves) to death, and meanwhile take over the rest of the world. I am more than happy to provide a suitable platform on which Google TV can operate.
 
Hey there- are you still monitoring this? Id like to reach out to you off line (off this forum) to discuss- creative ideas only. Let me know- thx - ian
 
Hey there- are you still monitoring this? Id like to reach out to you off line (off this forum) to discuss- creative ideas only. Let me know- thx - ian

If you're talking to me, then yes, I'm always monitoring this! If you'd like, I will PM you my email address.
 
I'll backup my media on the cloud and stream stream stream!! :)Also, I wouldn't have to worry about losing my data as all my data would be backed up on the cloud.
 
that's what i have been doing for years now. photos on flickr. videos on YouTube. Raw videos and other data on Dropbox.
 
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