HIStalk
It
was a long day at HIMSS, but good. I got to the convention center very
early and hung around outside some of the workshops (I'm sure I looked
like a psycho lurker, but I wasn't registered for anything, so I had to
peek in). Those I saw had great attendance. The combined session of
physicians, nurses, and pharmacists was huge, the venture fair was
loaded with people, and I heard the project management workshop was
good.
Say what you want about HIMSS, nobody runs a conference
any better than those folks, at least that I've seen. I can't imagine
the logistics involved, but I can appreciate the result: I felt
comfortable, welcome, and relaxed. Signage was excellent, the buses ran
well (although it took forever to get to the hotel after the opening
reception), and registration and tote bag pickup was lightning-fast.
Orlando's
far from being my favorite convention town, but the Orange County
Convention Center is definitely my favorite. Lots of room, extremely
well maintained, and helpful folks on hand. If it just had San Diego's
view ...
The only negative is that it was darned humid in the
convention center until mid-morning, so I'm thinking the AC is
programmed to kick on later on Sundays. On the other hand, HIMSS had
snacks and drinks out everywhere, even the fancy stuff like chocolate
shavings and rock candy sticks for the coffee (I don't drink coffee, so
if I did, I'd want all that after-market stuff dumped in). It wasn't
many years ago that the folks in the Sunday workshops would starve
because not only didn't HIMSS provide food, there wasn't any to be had
because all the kiosks were closed. The situation is much improved. I
still feel like a king when I can get a free soda on HIMSS Sunday.
Why
healthcare costs keep increasing: a crummy convention center double
cheeseburger and fries, which looked like it would taste the same as
the paper boat it reposed it, was $10.75. Coffee was
$3.52. Ball game
food is better and cheaper.
I strolled by the venture capital
fair to see what was going on. From the hall, all I could see was two
groups: intense, fully suited young guys (at 7:30 a.m.) and casual
older fellows who seemed to be having a blast. Guess which group was
the guys with money? Hint: when you're loaded, you can dress however
you damn well please. I admire that.
The buses were wrapped in
huge ads, of course (pic above). Microsoft had the most with Amalga,
but the IntraNexus Sapphire ones were far cooler. While I was looking
at the buses, I noticed some of the company reps loading in the usual
cases of stuff. The ladies wore clothing ranging from casual to
double-take revealing, so there's a plus (well, in a few cases,
anyway).
They were already handing out Monday's
Healthcare IT News,
making me feel temporarily psychic again (no stock market or sports
page, unfortunately, or I could have retired early). It had the usual
lame, pun-filled headlines. I overheard one publications reporter, who
looked about 20, explaining her background: "I don't know anything
about healthcare, but I did take biology in college." Great.
I
saw a fair number of people I know and another few that I know only
through HIStalk. The only sponsor I saw was a guy in a Novo
Innovations
shirt.
I swung by the CIO meeting area and they've pretty much
got the luxury track over there. They got their own tote bags, better
lunch, and more goodies (not to mention their own lounge). That room
looked packed, too. They get a free iPod if they sit through three
focus group sessions. Rank has privileges.
Galvanon had their
kiosks set out with maps and session guides. Great marketing idea. I
fiddled around with one and they were pretty cool.
I'm still
trying to figure out the tote bags. They were designed to be used as a
day pack kind if deal, which I refuse to use since it just looks weird
on anyone over 25, so I tried to carry it like the usual tote bag. It's
got one handle that's on one side, which means it always feel like it's
off balance. You also can't carry it open since the non-handle side
just gaps open. I'm not a fan.
I saw a guy with a vendor CEO
badge (I won't mention which company, but it's one whose commentary
here isn't consistently positive) peering intently at his laptop on a
wireless connection. I sidled around behind him to see what was drawing
his rapt attention and it was HIStalk.
I'm on a terrible
Internet connection, which is driving me nuts. I should have stayed at
the convention center to get this written since they had good Wi-Fi
from what people were saying. They also have recharge stations for all
of one's gadgets.
Lots of people at my hotel and at the
convention center were riding around on Segways, which were apparently
a dismal flop everywhere but Orlando. The strangest was a guy cruising
around outside by the buses and smoking like a chimney. It always
strikes me as both funny and sad to see someone pedaling a bike and
smoking, so this was similar.
Outside the speaker ready room: I
saw two folks with a Cochise-like string of ribbonry, none of the the
unauthorized HIStalk kind. I could decide if they were trying to be
funny or really were that full of themselves.
The opening
reception was pretty good. I took a little video, which I'll post if I
ever get on a non-hamster powered connection. I really like it when the
reception is held outside, like in San Diego, and this one was in a
dark ballroom, which felt like somebody's very large basement rumpus
room. The band was OK and celebrity imposters were on hand.
RelayHealth's Fake Inga (pic above) wasn't getting a lot of attention
that I noticed, but I couldn't keep track of her. The memorable moment
was when Real Inga and I approached her, got an "I Might Be Inga"
ribbon, and asked her what the Inga thing was all about. Real Inga was
tickled because Fake Inga gave some kind of evasive answer,
like "It
might be a person and it might be electronic, but you'll have to visit
the RelayHealth booth to find out." She was pretty cute, but Real
Inga's got her beat.
And yes, it seemed strange to hear the
occasional HIStalk mention. That hasn't really happened before. Real
Inga and I were babbling like children at how strange it is to see Fake
Inga and other evidence that we're not just a figment of each other's
imagination, sitting in front of a keyboard for way too long each day.
Rumor
heard: Allscripts will announce its acquisition of the remaining part
of the healthcare business of Misys. Unverified and certainly
questionable, but the sources were fair to good and there were more
than one. Kind of makes sense.
Just one completely unnecessary
reminder for those who RSVPed: Monday, 6 to 8 at the Peabody (it's that
giant, sun-blocking building that looms large from every window in the
convention center lobby). No hints on the 7:30 guest speaker, but I
believe an entourage is involved.
E-mail me.