I've used Fastmail for many years and would not hesitate to recommend them as a reliable, flexible solution. Currently I love their one time pass word feature, great for use while traveling.
With so many different delivery systems starting to get good, legal content and both the big tech companies and the content producers joining the fight this should be interesting. Now if only we could get around the DRM that limits most content to windows machines.
In the medical field a huge amount of research is produced everyday and any (or none) of it could have an impact on patient care. While the use of PowerPoint does does often oversimplify some research its use in journal clubs does allow a much larger range of research to be sampled by a group.
PowerPoint is a useful tool but it is not intended to be the sole medium of information, it is an easily accessable format that aids group understanding of the information.
That being said it does seem that people spend more time getting PowerPoint to do what they want than composing a good presentation.
I would recommend looking at Ananova as they have some of the most up to date information. The coverage is not very indepth, just rapid publishing of facts searchable by time date stamp or topic.
It is England based (run buy Orange) but a very useful source for forming your own opinions based on the latest information. The same information tends to find its way onto the BBC news site (which rocks) a couple of hours later.
I've used Fastmail for many years and would not hesitate to recommend them as a reliable, flexible solution. Currently I love their one time pass word feature, great for use while traveling.
With so many different delivery systems starting to get good, legal content and both the big tech companies and the content producers joining the fight this should be interesting. Now if only we could get around the DRM that limits most content to windows machines.
In the medical field a huge amount of research is produced everyday and any (or none) of it could have an impact on patient care. While the use of PowerPoint does does often oversimplify some research its use in journal clubs does allow a much larger range of research to be sampled by a group. PowerPoint is a useful tool but it is not intended to be the sole medium of information, it is an easily accessable format that aids group understanding of the information. That being said it does seem that people spend more time getting PowerPoint to do what they want than composing a good presentation.
I would recommend looking at Ananova as they have some of the most up to date information. The coverage is not very indepth, just rapid publishing of facts searchable by time date stamp or topic. It is England based (run buy Orange) but a very useful source for forming your own opinions based on the latest information. The same information tends to find its way onto the BBC news site (which rocks) a couple of hours later.