Top Apps and Reasons to Jailbreak the iPhone or iPod

Ah, jailbreaking. That great iPhone adventure that starts with the timidness of breaking free of Apple’s control and ends with the excitement of taking full advantage of your powerful (and expensive!) device. At one time, there was a debate about the legality of jailbreaking. Apple wanted it to be illegal under the DMCA and consumers wanted the freedom to do what they wish with devices they have purchased. Well, in the end, the consumers won and jailbreaking continues on as it always has.

For those new to the jailbreaking scene, what follows is a list of some of the best apps available for jailbroken iPhone and iPod Touch devices. For more information on jailbreaking, search Google with your device and firmware version. Generally, if you have a 3.x firmware, blackra1n should work for you and if you have a 4.x firmware (excluding >4.0.1), http://jailbreakme.com should be your method of choice.

Without further delay, let’s take a look at some fantastic apps: Continue reading

Being Remembered

As some of you know, I spend a great deal of my time in the hospital as a medical student, helping about where I can, doing blood work, running things around, talking with patients and answering random questions from residents and interns (a process called “pimping” which is kind of like a right of passage for medical students). I’ve already seen a great deal at the hospital; however, the one thing that has struck me more than any other is the patients I have seen.

I’ve seen a number of older patients, some just in for minor problems but others in as long-term residents. These are the people that have stuck with me. Elderly patients on ventilators, contracted, non-communicative, total care dependent with little to no hope of ever making a recovery. Elderly patients with varying forms of dementia brought on by old age, infection and improperly managed care. Continue reading

Down at the Coney Island…

Well, 2.5 weeks have gone by in the internal medicine training program at Coney Island hospital. I’ve seen a lot of interesting patients which I can’t discuss due to HIPAA and I’ve got to do some procedures. I’m hoping over the next few weeks, I’ll get to do more but it is what it is. I’m learning a lot at times but it really seems like self-directed study. My residents are good about teaching the treatment protocols for the patients but you really have to push to get involved. A lot of times, all I can do is take a history (assuming the patient speaks English – there’s a huge Russian population here) which, at first, was fun but now it’s pretty routine. I could sit in a chair with my eyes closed and probably do it just as well. Continue reading

Thoughts on medical school and the USMLE

Well, now that the USMLE Step 1 and two years of medical school are out of the way, I thought I’d write a brief reflection on the experience including my thoughts on what was good, what was bad and how it can be improved. I’ve actually been meaning to write this for some time but my thoughts have been concentrated on other matters. Continue reading

A Most Powerful Statement

I don’t know.

Sometimes this can be the most powerful, insightful and honest statement of all.

I don’t know.

I don’t know what happens when we die. I don’t know if these is something beyond what we can see and measure with science. I don’t know if I have a soul or if the concept of a soulmate is a true thing. Far too many people spread certainty when they simply don’t know. They tell us that when we die we’ll be whisked off to a magical place full of puffy clouds, pearly gates and old guys with long beards and iPads full of every mundane thing we’ve ever done. Continue reading

April Fool’s!

HAHAHAH! What a great day! Great laughs and great fun!

A short chronicle of the day’s hard-core conservative Republican attitude:

Obama bad. Rush good. Palin = Amazing! Drill baby drill! ♥ ♥ $$$. Stop mooching. No insurance? Don’t get sick. Rich only rich because we’re smart and work hard. Poor people just lazy. We’ll find the WMD’s. China evil except when they loan us money. “No” until 2012. Repeal the bill. That is all. http://www.facebook.com/brian.wells?v=feed&story_fbid=10100370050128391&ref=mf
Brian Wells is tired of all these unpatriotic liberals whining about freedom of speech, invasion of privacy, limits on health coverage, etc. Sick? Then get a job, buy insurance and stay healthy while you wait for things to be covered! Maybe you should have thought about those genes before you were conceived and you wouldn’t now have a genetic disorder. So stop being lazy and mooching off me. http://www.facebook.com/brian.wells?v=feed&story_fbid=10100369856276871&ref=mf
After 4 years of research and development, I’m pleased to announcement that my long-awaited army of ill-tempered super dolphins is ready. We couldn’t get the head-mounted lasers to work but the flipper-mounted plasma cannons do just fine. http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=66260291&id=2004912&comments&ref=mf
I’ve agreed to take a consulting job with the conservative think tank AEI. Consultations will be done over the phone and email so I don’t even have to move. I’ll be working on the economic benefits of regulation-free banking, studying ways to run solar plants with coal and oil and lobbying to repeal health care reform and replace it with a reality show where contestants compete for insurance coverage. http://www.facebook.com/brian.wells?v=feed&story_fbid=107089942659163&ref=mf

While being a Republican was fun, it’s time to return to my liberal Democrat ways. 364 more days until I get to join the GOP ranks once again!

I Can Finally Say It

It feels good to finally come to terms with what I believe. I’ve tried to hide it for so long, acting like I believe in liberal ideas, pretending to care about the environment and global warming, believing in the unity of humanity. Now, I can finally admit it.

I’m a hard-core conservative Republican!

I have an autographed 5×7 of Ronald Reagan on my desk.

I dream of one day getting my book signed by Karl Rove and shaking the hand of Dick Cheney.

I think people should realize companies only have our best interests at heart. When we try to regulate them, we keep them from being best able to help us.

It feels good to finally come clean and stop pretending. Hopefully, the next time I have a revelation in my life, it won’t take me decades to realize it.

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Learnin’ pathways, debatin’ neocons and USMLE’in round the world

USMLE'in round the world

Born in Palatka,  Gator to the core, a hot-headed doctor named Brian Wells, he loves to debate but he loves one thing more – USMLE’in round the world! He studies his biochem, he studies his path, just go and ask him ’bout Brandt-Daroff, if there’s two things he loves  it’s USMLE’in and… USMLE’in round the world! Learnin’ pathways, debatin’ neocons, and USMLE’in round the world!
(to the melody of http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-DblXaqQMk)

Well, another week is here which means another set of days of USMLE Step 1 studying. The studying is going ok, it just feels tedious most of the time. Who would have thought that reviewing all the material covered in the first two years of medical school would be so “exciting.” Luckily, I have more than just my First Aid and Kaplan books. I never thought I’d be so glad to see a video lecture or hear Dr. Goljan’s voice after a few straight hours of reading, memorizing, reading, memorizing,… and so on. The “not thinking” part is getting to me because I’m definitely a critical thinking/ideas/concepts person and can think of nothing I dislike more than rote memorization, especially when I know my iPhone is laughing at me because it can “learn” all this information after about 10 seconds of uploading. However, it MUST be done and thus I press on. I’m not one to back away from a challenge but I will say this: I’m sending a cookie to the first person to figure out how to get neurons to interface with silicon chips.

Which brings me to my next topic: iPhone programming. There are LOTS of opportunities out there for mobile medical software that just require doctors and engineers to get together. I’ve got a few myself but right now I don’t have the expertise in objective C. I guess that’s what April and May will need to be for. If I could complete a product and push it out before starting 3rd year, I’ll consider that a huge success. I have the whole thing mapped out in my head, the look of it, the functions, the backend environment, etc. What I’m missing right now is time to really master the iPhone (and ultimately a port to Android).

So that’s where I stand right now. I haven’t written in this thing in a long time so I figured there’s no time like the present. I have my gym workout everyday to which I look forward. Weights and cardio have become a great stress management tool. Speaking of which, since this morning was consumed by Gainesville and my yearly MD checkup, I think the USMLE can afford to wait another hour. To the gym!

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If I ran the zoo…

“It’s a pretty good zoo,” Said young Gerald McGrew,
“And the fellow who runs it seems proud of it, too.”
“But if I ran the zoo,” Said young Gerald McGrew,
“I’d make a few changes, that’s just what I’d do.”

This Dr. Seuss book is a story about a young boy imagining the kind of zookeeper he would be. He would get rid of all the “old-fashioned” animals like lions and tigers, then he would stock his zoo with such never-before-heard-of creatures as an Elephant-cat, a scraggle-foot Mulligatawny, a Thwerll, and an obsk.

A lot of times criticism is like this. Sure, we have the right to criticize. Criticism is healthy and it helps to identify problem areas allowing us to improve. McGrew thinks the zoo should be improved but he doesn’t provide a workable solution. I don’t know about you, but I haven’t seen many scraggle-foot Mulligatawnys lately. Taken out of the context of a children’s story, this type of criticism would be useless in the real world (if you need a more concrete example, think about the health care proposals that do nothing to control costs or improve quality. Yeah, the McGrew  example is more fun).

However, there is a difference between useful criticism and useless criticism. Allow me to explain.

Useless criticism can be identified quite easily. It finds a flaw in a system, action or idea and, without providing feedback or any kind of solution, it dwells upon the flaw to call into question the observed item. For example, an audience member at the movies may say “Transformers was a terrible movie. All those explosions made the movie monotonous and boring.” Great, excellent point. But… what should have been done differently?

How about turning that criticism into creative energy? For example, “Transformers was a terrible movie. All those explosions made the movie monotonous and boring. They really should have focused more on the storyline to setup an enthralling sequel and leave the audience with a memorable experience.” Now, instead of being pointless criticism, that simple idea can be turned into a short story or even a full blown movie proposal. It may improve an industry. You borrow some basic plot ideas, add in your own, write it all up as a screenplay and see what happens. Maybe nothing, maybe something crazy… right Good Will Hunting?

So keep this simple point in mind. The next time you have a criticism, be sure to attach advice or a solution to the criticism. Criticism with advice is healthy and often needed. No one can be perfect at all times; we each need this feedback in order to improve which is why your attached advice or solution is so vital.

Otherwise, you’re just Gerald McGrew with a scraggle-foot Mulligatawny.

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Someone to watch over us

I’ll be honest. When it came to believing in God, a higher power, whatever you want to call it – I really tried. I know it would be comforting to think there’s someone out there watching over me, someone that wants only the best for me. I think that deep down we all want to know that someone is watching over us, helping us through the hard times and giving us strength when we need it most.

But I never saw it.

Maybe I didn’t look hard enough. Maybe my mind is so full of questions and doubts, biology and physics, a need for proof and explanation that I can’t see it. Maybe I’m wrong… and maybe I’m not.

But I do have something I believe in, something I have faith in, something that gives me comfort and hope when I’m feeling down. I have faith in the promise and goodness of humanity and in the power of individuals or small groups of people to change the world for the better. I believe that deep down people really are good at heart. For me, there’s no other explanation – we simply had to be in order to survive. Sure, we make mistakes. We go left when we should have gone right, or we say a careless word that sticks with and stings those who care about us. However, we can also give two of the most powerful words that, when meant, show our goodness: I’m sorry. We acknowledge our own shortcomings and we make amends for offenses.

We cooperate.

We forgive.

But it doesn’t end there. People show their goodness every day whether it’s stopping to help someone change a flat tire, volunteering at a soup kitchen or offering to share their umbrella on a rainy day. I’m sure you can think of a time that a total stranger did something nice for you, not because they were expecting something in return but because it was the right thing to do.

Richard Dawkins noted that “[the brain’s] rules of thumb influence us still, not in a Calvinistically deterministic way but filtered through the civilizing influences of literature and custom, law and tradition – and, of course, religion. Just as the primitive brain rules of sexual lust passes through the filter of civilization to emerge in the love scenes of Romeo and Juliet, so primitive brain rules of us-versus-them vendetta emerge in the running battles between Capulets and Montagues; while primitive brain rules of altruism and empathy end up in the misfiring that cheers us in the chastened reconciliation of Shakespeare’s final scene.”

Perhaps the desire to do good, to be generous and compassionate is hard-wired into us as a result of our evolutionary history. This makes perfect sense in my view and makes me stronger in my faith in humanity. It’s enjoyable to think that within each of us is this desire and even more thrilling when that desire is manifest into action.

I often dream of a day when humanity will wake up and realize that we’re all in this together. When we’ll all realize that we must care for one another because each voice gained enriches us and each voice lost diminishes us. When we realize that the world speaks with many languages but with one voice. The world speaks with the voice of hope, honor, strength, integrity, compassion and togetherness.

My faith tells me that humanity has this power all within itself. I believe that one day we will all be able to work together to resolve our differences peacefully without resorting to the derogatory distinctions and old hatreds that only serve to keep us apart.

I know that I will likely never live to see this day but I can dream, I can believe and I can have faith. I can do everything in my power to help make this dream a reality through my work as a doctor and hopefully through my future work in politics. My belief in humanity’s potential and my belief in the power of individuals or small groups of people to change the world for the better helps me go on when times are hardest. It gives me the strength to continue on my path and the hope that one day I can make a difference.

And for me, this dream is my “someone to watch over us.”

 

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