I kept on meaning to do this, but work got in the way. Mind expanding it out to healthcare tech in general to cover regulatory and IT policy in addition to mobile? There's a lot of potential with a nice link aggregator for the community.
I hate having to follow comment threads on 15 different blogs.
Just signed up, will support. I may be able to help a bit bringing some of the loudmouth hcsm personalities over, if that's something you're interested in.
Not to be a hater, I think it's a cool idea, but spinning up Telescope on a server isn't really 'making' something. At least change the css or something (eg. http://www.hackb.io/)
While I'm not in the medical world, I have quite a few friends who work on IT departments in analytics and my wife is an occupational therapist. I think there is a market for this I just have no idea how big, personally.
Nice work. I did same Telescope-mvpness at http://lighthouse.io for community builders - putting together a bookmarklet for link sharing and happy to share if I finish it.
Cool I'll share it on behalf of hackinghealth.ca (We do events where hackers connect with doctors to build similar stuff. So I'll definitely plug that website when people contact me with their new health mobile app :))
As someone in healthcare transitioning into healthcare tech/startups - this is amazing! I prefer the Hacker News layout, less images, smaller text, more substance but this is amazing none the less. Thanks!
There is a significant portion of the healthcare conversation (federal policy wonks, CMIO, etc) that will not use reddit for whatever reasons (confusion, overwhelming, not 'serious' etc).
In the interest of developing real conversation, and not just an echo chamber, I think this is the right direction. Also, /r/healthIT and /r/healthcareIT haven't been a great success.
Subreddits are awesome, but one advantage of using an open-source app like Telescope is that you can customize everything, from the color scheme to the site structure to the ranking algorithm.
I think the tricky thing is that many Health IT people aren't really interested in what's going on on the other side of the fence except sales people scoping out competition. I only know alot about other Health IT software vendors that I've replaced their software with the company that I worked for. Someone that knows a lot about one vendor might not know anything about any of the others. It makes it easy to make sweeping generalizations sometimes; some of which aren't always warranted.
You could also say the same thing about HN, but it always has this feeling of articles that are either "Academic or things the Valley would care about". Most Health IT topics are neither.