Comments on your biomechanics website

Comments on your biomechanics website

@ProfRausch On your page at http://www.manuelrausch.com/ there are three rotating icons. One for diffusion tensor MRI, one for Finite Element Model and the one I was interested in on the right, no link or text. Perhaps you could spend more time at your http://www.manuelrausch.com/publications page linking to open sites. Recommend do not use PDF, which locks your content into unusable format, but make it available in dynamic html. Where Internet users (about 5.4 Billion) can interact with and use real tools and real data. Research without sharing is often wasteful. Listing your data, is like dumping in folders. It needs human, or outstanding AI, curation and guidance. Your site can be much more informative. Your Team is not your “people”, and there are no links to background or a living community.
 
Just a few of my first impressions. I have reviewed Internet sites and methods every day for the last 27 years. I was looking at your post on spinal cord injury repair accelerators. My brother, Jeff, broke his neck at C2 so was completely paralyzed and on a respirator. Assistive technologies did not help because they have insufficient sensors, memory and skills. Treatments without real time monitoring, are doing it blind.
 
I am fairly certain that William Meador graduated from Case Western RESERVE University (my first university). You can make you community a living thing, if people stay in touch and continue on common topics and goals.
Ask Sascha, Tatum, Jessie, Diego to also write their interests and goals. As they mature and create, build and grow, they can stay linked and part of a community. If it benefits them and help solve problems and grow opportunities in the world.

Rather than bringing people physically together, it is possible to coordinate and facilitate online – regardless of country, language, or other “gigs” and lives people and teams might have.

( “blood clot” OR “blood clots” OR “thrombus” OR “blood coagulation”  OR “embolus”) has 65.5 Million entry points today and your site does not map that at all.  That is just English and there are hundreds of human languages now.

Nor your other goals, markets, and real world objectives.  You show “we have people”, “we write things and do experiments (no pictures or videos)”, “we work on things”.  Your site is the worlds view of who you are and what you do, but more why you do it and where you want to go.

Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation
Richard K Collins

About: Richard K Collins

The Internet Foundation Internet policies, global issues, global open lossless data, global open collaboration


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