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Entries in technology (32)

Monday
Aug052013

Wait, you can Google Carbs?!

 

A huge thank you to Manny Hernandez for finding this gem on Google!

So it turns out that Google knows about carbs! All you have to do is enter a food name followed by the word 'carbohydrate', then through some weird Internety voodoo magic, Google returns a ton of useful information and options. It even works on your phone's mobile browser!

 

Thanks again to Manny for finding and sharing this Googlerrific wonderment!

Friday
Jul262013

Suite D

 

 

The first installment of my series on helping children with diabetes gain independence through technology is live on Suite D. This six part collection is centered on the process that we use to manage Arden's BGs while she is away from our home at school, sleep overs and other long-term visits.

 

Suite D is a diabetes blog that is owned and operated by Insulet, the makers of OmniPod. I was compensated for my writing but please know that I was not asked, nor would I ever let this effect my opinions about the OmniPod insulin pump. Arden's Day and the relationship that you and I have together means far more to me than any freelance writing work. You can always trust that I am giving my honest opinions whether you hear my words here or somewhere else. Your safety, my integrity and the sanctity of the diabetes online community are paramount in my mind, always. I hope you enjoy the series!

 

Thursday
Jun202013

OmniPod, DexCom... you impress me

 

Tonight is the sixth night of our island vacation and I wanted to take a second to report in. So far during our trip Arden has been on an airplane, outside in the rain, lived in 90º heat and spent countless, often consecutive hours in the ocean. 

I am here to report that Arden's diabetes tech has not skipped a beat... I can't tell you just how invaluable these tools are in difficult situations like these. Between odd sleep times, varied and strangely timed meals and all of the activity, there is enough going on to mess with even the most Zen diabetes guru. I am not ashamed to tell you that I'd be just a little lost without our gear. 

I'll leave you with a picture of Arden in a mango tree.

I hope everyone is having a great week! 

Thursday
Mar142013

New OmniPod Wherefore Art Thou?

I can remember bugging my parents unmercifully one Christmas for the Omnibot robot from Tomy. I couldn't think of anything else in the months leading up to December 25th. I was hooked the very first time that I saw the Omnibot commercial on television... my wildest dreams were about to come true!

 

 

I feel like that little kid again today as I patiently wait for the new OmniPod to arrive at our front door.

Insulet's phone message: It's not super cool like the commercial you just watched but Insulet has recorded an audio message for their customers. You can hear the message at my link or by dialing (888)-7-GET-POD.

 

Questions about the new OmniPod

I'm sure you've noticed that some people are beginning to receive the new OmniPod. Arden hasn't received hers yet, but as soon as she does I'll begin to make notes about our experience so that I can pass my thoughts on to you.

Until that time, and let's hope it's soon... if you have any questions about the new OmniPod that you would like me to address please leave them in this discussion thread. Hopefully, I'll be answering them before Christmas.

Wierd side note: I knew that I wanted to write about my desire to own the Omnibot robot as a child. When I began to consider this post I, no lie, I couldn't remember the name of the robot - only what it looked like. After some Googling I found an image and couldn't believe that my robot, from all of those years ago, was called the Omnibot. That's the kind of stuff Alanis Morissette writes songs about, don't cha think?

Sunday
Jan272013

DexCom G4 Platinum: Follow Up

It's been three months since I first gave my impressions of the new DexCom G4 Platinum CGM and two months since I published a Second Look piece. Today it's time for a follow up...

 

Overall I am quite pleased to say that everything that I previously reported to you about the G4 still stands as true. Signal distance is vastly improved, insertion is less of an issue from a pain standpoint and accuracy is often spot on. What then you ask prompted me to write a follow up? I wanted to share my experience with DexCom customer service and how they handled my call to tell them that the thumb pad on Arden's receiver was breaking.

 

Before I get to the thumb pad I want say that not long after we began to use the new G4 I noticed an odd video noise on the screen when the receiver transitioned from screen to screen. It happens mostly when entering a BG, a garbled image appears as the receiver switches from one screen to the next. I never noticed a decrease in the receiver's accuracy so I assumed that the video noise wasn't a critical issue and decided not to call CS over what I deemed a cosmetic glitch.

A few weeks later the thumb pad began acting up. The thumb pad is basically five buttons, up, down, left, right and center. The donut shaped disc handles the directional clicks and the small nub in the middle, selects. Our unit's disc began to not go back into place after selecting down. The disc would rock as it should toward the down selection but then never fully return to it's starting point. I felt like it was only a matter of time before the disc became worn further. I imagined that soon instead of just getting stuck in the down position the disc was going to pop out. I let things go for as long as I could and then I called DexCom this past Saturday morning.

I explained that the thumb pad was loose and getting worse. The kind woman on the phone asked politely if I had dropped it, we hadn't. She verified my address, apologized that it wouldn't be able to ship until Monday and explained how I should go about making the switch once the new unit arrived. The entire call took less then five minutes. It was very pleasant.

It seems that I timed my phone call almost perfectly as nine hours later, as we were preparing to eat dinner for the first time at Harold's in Edison, NJ, (you may have seen the picture on FaceBook of Arden with our "slice" of cake) the thumb pad fell out completely. I used a piece of packing tape to hold everthing in place until Tuesday. Here's what the unit looks like when the thumb pad comes off:

 

Initially I wanted to be annoyed that the receiver had issues after such a short time, but instead I took a more reasonable position. New technology is prone to issues like this, early adopters take a risk in my opinion. As long as the manufacturer stands behind the product and doesn't make its replacement a headache, I'm okay with stuff like this happening. I wish it wouldn't, but I understand. I hope that my issue is either isolated or promptly addressed by DexCom. Who knows, maybe it already has been in more recent runs of the product.

If you are seeing this issue with your unit, It's my opinion is that you can expect it to eventually become a problem that will need your attention.