Learn more about Pillbox and how you can get involved during the Hangout, and also check out the Office of the National Coordinator’s upcoming medication management Codeathon, which will be held in partnership with Treehouse Health in Minneapolis on Oct 24-26. Pillbox can be used to build anything from a pill identification or medication reminder/tracking app to helping create electronic health records, systems that reduce medication errors and adverse events, support research, and save kittens (Pillbox includes veterinary medications). mash it with other awesome drug data sets, and.create a public domain library of pill images,.What is Pillbox?įor those who don’t know Pillbox, we take the complex data about medications that pharmaceutical companies are required to report to the government and We’ll also talk about the upcoming Pillbox codeathon in Minneapolis. Other NLM and FDA data, APIs, and projects Pillbox developers should be looking at.Opportunities for development with Pillbox that meet key challenges in healthcare.Recently released open source Pillbox code that enables developers to download and parse the complex source data sets and make their own Pillbox.Tools to help developers build with Pillbox (search API, data/image downloads, documentation).The power and limits of working with Pillbox’s data.Pillbox’s unique value to developers by munging multiple HHS drug data sets and adding pill images.Mark will ask questions about the challenges developers run into when using Pillbox. We’ll talk about why developers should be excited to have access to the data, pill images, API, and open source code. I (Pillbox project manager), Mark Silverberg of Social Health Insights (builder of super cool health apps), and Maya Uppaluru of ONC (leads their Innovation Engagement program) will go under the hood of Pillbox. I hope it will work for you as well.Tuesday, October 7 at 2pm ET, the National Library of Medicine at the National Institutes of Health will host a Google Hangout to talk about developing with the API, data, and open source code from Pillbox. Firefox worked for me in LM18 without any additional hassle. well, kind of )Īfter all switching to Firefox may be a better and more comfortable solution as it looks like webcam video can't be permanently flipped "upside down" with Chrome until Google fix their Linux version. But here is the good news you can get library-subscribed e-resources with. It will flip it only locally, so people who you talk to via Chrome also need to use the same trick. Not all academic publications are free for full-text access in Google Scholar. It allows you to flip your webcam video or any other element of a webpage. You can add Flip this extension to Chrome. Long story short it looks like they are not actively working on fixing this for almost a year now. You can see the whole discussion in the bug report thread. For more then a year now libv4l2 is added to Chromium, but is not enabled for Linux. In the comment 22 you can see that 2 years ago there was a 0001-Use-libv4l2-for-Linux-V4L-grabber.patch proposed that fixes Chrome/Chromium behavior. Cheese also displays video properly.Īfter some googling I found this bug report. I faced "upside down" webcam video on hangouts and facebook using Chrome web browser only. V4L2 is needed for WebRTC video.Ī few days ago I updated ASUS P52F laptop to Linux Mint 18 XFCE that is on par with Ubuntu 16.04.1 now. Regarding fixing inverted/flipped laptop webcam video in Chrome/Chromium based browsers - V4L1 will not work with Chrome.
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