Tell application "QuickTime Player" set newMovieRecording to new movie recording tell newMovieRecording set current camera of newMovieRecording to "Kevin's iPhone" set current microphone of newMovieRecording to "Kevin's iPhone" end tell end tell It turns out that you should be able to do the following: A quick search turned up this Stack Overflow question. I had to select my iPhone for the video/audio inputs in QuickTime using AppleScript. The following is the code hosted on a Public Gist. If you need to, you can always dive into the functions themselves. The first eight lines cover all necessary customization needs as they are just function calls. I may be biased, but the source code is organized quite well in my opinion. This GIF demonstrates the automation that covers all seven manual steps. Enable KeepingYouAwake (so monitor doesn’t go to sleep with no inputs). ![]() There are a number of steps that I have to complete to mirror my iPhone to QuickTime: In this situation, I’ll mirror my iOS device through QuickTime so that I can play on a larger screen with a controller. As mentioned in my previous article, I’ll sometimes play on my exercise bike. ![]() For the games that have controller support, I’ll stream the video on a larger screen. Take a dose of BI every day and sleep well.Like many, I’m guilty of playing mobile games on my iPhone. With BI, this potentially sleep-disruptive concern can be put to rest. No longer do clinicians have to wait for reports to be researched, compiled, published, and distributed. How about comparing the KPIs against benchmarks the clinical team has created based on regulations and company/facility-established standards, usually set to exceed the regulatory requirements? It’s all in one dashboard. Now, I referred earlier to managers making KPIs their own. If the data exists, the information can be viewed in the BI dashboard. Restraints? Weight loss? Anti-psychotic use? Infections? Readmissions? Falls/Accidents? Sentinel events, such as dehydration or fecal impaction? Indwelling catheters? Pain management? Hour per patient/resident day compared to state standards and to budget? Overtime usage? And more. This information can include such KPIs as in-house-acquired or community-acquired pressure ulcers with the number of residents with pressure ulcers at what stages and at what percent of the average daily census over a month’s period of time or trended over a 12-month period. With regular input either directly from the data which resides within their clinical application automatically “pumped” into the data warehouse or keyed in directly, clinicians have access to frequently refreshed information. Let’s take a look at some of the KPIs clinicians can view to discover in measurable terms if their areas of concern are compliant. With Business Intelligence, clinical managers can conveniently view a variety of KPIs which they can make their own. But today WITH BI at a manager’s fingertips, those with compliance concerns, including clinical managers, have ready access to critical Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). In the days before automated data mining and business intelligence (BI)-generated dashboards and reporting, I would have to make a mental note to investigate if and how compliant we were, recognizing that the research alone would take quite a lot of time, assuming no interruptions (silly me), sorting through charts, files, and printouts. ![]() But times have changed and so has technology potentially barring the stage doors to unsolicited dream disturbers. One of those frequent limelight-stealing imps was a nagging doubt about my facility’s compliance.Ĭompliant to what? Federal and State regulations? Fire and safety? The Fair Labor Standards Act? Safe Harbor? HIPAA? Corporate standards and objectives? The list goes on and on, each list member competing animatedly for my attention. Stifling a cry, I would sit bolt upright in bed, beads of sweat on my furrowed brow. It was one thing to steal the limelight, it was another to completely take over the show and lock the stage door to my more sedate and slumber-inducing dreams. Their discordant presence would dash the quiet and restful performance currently playing, causing me to start into a sudden and unwelcome wakefulness. What keeps you up at night? When I ran SNFs, many things would intrusively leap onto the stage of my dreams, stealing the limelight. LTPAC Clinical executives can know rather easily.
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