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Gus Venditto

Gus Venditto

Gus Venditto is the former Vice President of Content Development for HIMSS Media and author of six books and hundreds of articles. At PC Magazine he was executive editor and author of the Pipeline column identifying IT trends. He was editor-in-chief of Internet World magazine and the Internet.com IT portal which included SearchEngineWatch and Developer.com. At DowJones he was a product manager of the career section of the WSJ Digital Network. You can follow him at @gusvenditto

 

By Gus Venditto | 05:06 pm | September 06, 2016
A team at Houston Methodist believes it has developed an artificial intelligence software program that can improve mammography readings to 99 percent accuracy by analyzing the free form text of clinical reports.
By Gus Venditto | 09:38 pm | March 02, 2016
 A field of 18 startups threw their best pitch and Sansoro won.
By Gus Venditto | 03:55 pm | March 02, 2016
Honors for innovation range from a mental joystick to delivering a unified view of a patient.
By Gus Venditto | 09:13 pm | March 01, 2016
At the Federal Health IT Solutions Pavilion, a solution to FHIR "ambiguities."
By Gus Venditto | 02:53 pm | March 01, 2016
Medical records should be able to "to speak and listen in the same language," officials say in HIMSS16 session.
By Gus Venditto | 06:13 pm | February 29, 2016
Report shared at the HIMSS16 Venture+ Forum shows a shift toward "supportive capital."
By Gus Venditto | 12:35 pm | February 24, 2016
More than 30 interviews with thought leaders will be broadcast over two days.
By Gus Venditto | 04:15 am | February 23, 2016
HIMSS16 is shaping up to be the largest gathering of healthcare IT professionals ever assembled.
By Gus Venditto | 10:40 am | February 12, 2016
With more than 300 educational sessions and over 1,300 exhibiting companies, the annual HIMSS conference presents an extreme challenge even for the most physically fit attendees.
By Gus Venditto | 10:15 am | January 27, 2016
Where does former National Coordinator Farzad Mostashari, MD, spend his time since leaving ONC? Back in the world of clinical issues, practice management, and talking to physicians. Only this time he’s an entrepreneur.