My career is full of work for telcos and insurance companies. It's important to them, but in the end it just helps them increase profits.
Does anybody here have any good stories about their software or I.T. work actually saving lives?
|
|
My career is full of work for telcos and insurance companies. It's important to them, but in the end it just helps them increase profits. Does anybody here have any good stories about their software or I.T. work actually saving lives?
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
closed as not a real question by shoosh, Aaron Maenpaa, Neil Butterworth, DJ, Tom Anderson Apr 25 at 0:29 |
|
|
I have used software that saves lives. The U. S. Coast Guard uses software to help locate people lost at sea. Basically it starts with a best estimate as to where they were and accounts for winds and tides to project where they will be now. This permits automated search planning to maximise the chance that they will actually be found alive. |
||
|
|
|
|
I know a doctor turned hacker in Brazil. The clinic that he worked for got a great deal on some ultrasound equipment, so they spent their budget on replacing very old, broken units. What the administrators did not realize was, it was not a one time cost. The units were designed to quit working every 45 days, on the dot, until a technician entered a code to certify that the machine was calibrated. That would sound like a good idea to most, however the cost of calibration was $10K USD each time, each unit. So, one round of calibration, you have exceeded the original purchase price. The company who sold them the units refused to certify any of their in house techs, no training was available .. yet calibrating their ultrasounds had been something they were doing in house for years. So, rather than face not having any ultrasounds, the doctor I know studied the units and figured out how to bypass both the hardware and software locks via JTAG. He had been a programming hobbyist, but never anything serious. Pretty brilliant guy. Not sure if this qualifies as a good answer to your question, though. |
||
|
|
|
|
I saved part of one. I wrote some software for a gal that spent 2-1/2 weeks a year in a labor-intensive, error-prone process that she dreaded very year, losing sleep at least 2-3 months ahead of time. I automated the process, and it took her 1-1/2 days, and she was happy again. |
||
|
|