Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Doctor's Toy Store has consistently delivered high customer satisfaction for doctors looking for new and used medical equipment at discount prices, and in 2017, they are re-focusing on the very important work done by their outstanding repair team that helps keep clients happy by keeping down time to a minimum; @drstoystore

For over 18 years Doctor's Toy Store has consistently delivered high customer satisfaction for doctors looking for new and used medical equipment at discount prices. Today, we focus on the very important work done by their outstanding repair team that helps keep clients happy by keeping down time to a minimum; Manual and Automatic Sterilizers. SPONSORED POST*


Above: Doctor's Toy Store owner and founder Rob Raymond checking his phone and text messages one last time before finally heading home.

My hard-working friend, Rob Raymond, Founder and CEO of Doctor’s Toy Store in Hallandale Beach, is a shining example of a South Florida businessman who has successfully adapted to the ever-changing technology trends in the medical equipment industry, while keeping his focus squarely where it belongs: on consistently delivering high levels of customer satisfaction that keeps clients loyal -and coming back for more


Delivering -or even receiving- consistently good customer service is that rarest of business qualities in South Florida, but Rob, ever-vigilant to what his clients want now and tomorrow in the way of medical equipment at discount prices, has parlayed that success so that over the past three years, he now boasts THE largest medical equipment showroom in Florida. Period.

As I’ve learned over the years, Rob is a creative guy who's always thinking outside-the-box to improve his business, always looking to make it easier for his team to do their job better. 

Over the years, thru dozens of conversations, Rob explained how he wanted to have a much-larger showroom than the one DTS had for so many years on Fashion Row so that he'd:
a.) be able to display a much-larger amount of medical equipment and devices than previously, and, 
b.) display those myriad products in a much-more attractive, interesting and more-intuitive fashion. And with much more space to walk around!

In short, Rob wanted to create a positive visceral experience for clients that would go straight into their long-term memories and help ensure very positive word-of-mouth among their colleagues and acquaintances because nothing beats the power of personal recommendations. 

Well, in the three-plus years now since the much-larger Doctors Toy Store showroom opened for business in their new location off of I-95, everything has proven Rob's vision correct, with lots of old and new clients constantly coming over, eager to see for themselves what’s what at the new-and-improved location.
And seeing is believing.





Rob knows from experience that an important factor for certain high-end or high-tech products is the buying experience itself. If you are physically present at the point-of-sale, have you received a positive experience that inspires confidence in your buying decision? 

But he also knows that a high degree of a client's satisfaction comes from the quality and
usability of the product itself and the degree of CONSISTENT quality customer service they receive after a purchase, including their trust in the quality of the repair work done by DTS's experienced professionals on-site.

So it’s with all this in mind that I'd like to share some of the impressive things I've observed and learned for myself recently at Doctors Toy Store

In 2017 Rob and his team want to better emphasize their ability to quickly-but-expertly perform repairs on medical equipment and devices for not just longstanding clients, but are also eager to gain more repair work from new clients and show them what they've been missing out on by using someone else.
And who wouldn't prefer better and quicker?

I recently had a chance to spend part of an afternoon in the Repair Dept. at Doctor's Toy Store, where I spoke with and had plenty of questions for Wellington, a friendly and very experienced repair technician who's been with DTS for the past two years.

Wellington is someone who's very important to the overall team effort because among his many talents in analyzing, diagnosing and fixing equipment problems for clients is his expertise with Manual and Automatic Sterilizers, one of the backbones of any medical practice or office.





















I started off by asking what the nature of the typical repair work was at DTS in an average month, and Wellington broke it down for me as follows:


40%  Autoclaves

30%  EKG equipment
10% Tables and Chairs
10%  Lasers or Ultra Sounds 
5%    Facial Monitors
5%    OR Tables 

He went on to explain that the main reason that the Autoclave takes the most time to diagnose and repair is because for most models, each warming cycle to reach the required 272 degrees Fahrenheit necessary to sterilize equipment, tools and glassware is about 40 minutes. 
So in trying to determine the problem, you also have to factor in enough time for the machine to cool down back to zero before trying again so you can see whether it works throughout the cycle.
That's key because in doing the repair, you must do it in a way that mirrors precisely how the equipment is designed to be used by clients in an office or hospital setting. 
You can't cheat simply to fix the problem!

That cooling-off period can sometimes be as long as 30-40 minutes, so you can appreciate how frustrating that can be when you are eager to diagnose and fix the problem as quickly as possible.

But you can't rush the equipment, you have to practice patience and sweat the details. 
And that's what Wellington does until everything is just the way clients want it to be.



Wellington said that in his time doing repairs at DTS, the most frequently seen Sterilizers were also necessarily the ones that are the most popular, Tuttnauer and Pelton & Crane, with both Automatic and Manual models, and Midmark, with their popular M7, M9 and M11 models.
Examples of some of these can be seen in the photos below in various stages of diagnosis and repair.









 











Wellington also educated me by showing me examples of some of the most-common problems associated with sterilizers and how he goes about diagnosing each item brought in for repair so that when they are returned, there's no new problem waiting to pop up.



1. Leaking gaskets

2. Clogged valves 
3. Faulty temperature sensors
4. Inaccurate pressure sensors.

Other problems: Relays, gauges and sensors not being properly calibrated. 

To do their job properly and safely, sterilizers should be about 15-27 psi.
The right temperature is roughly 252 to 272 degrees Fahrenheit.

Used properly, the Autoclave should use about one and three-quarters gallons of distilled water per week, and not be changed more often, but sometimes, for whatever reason, people using them think they are smarter than the manufacturers and... that's when problems occur.









































One thing that I learned from Wellington really resonated with me because it so closely resembled a behavior that I'd seen myself many times while working at well-known law firms in Washington, D.C. Many lawyers came to become computer literate and no longer depend upon staff for typing up drafts and correspondence from learning and then using Windows 97. But once they found their comfort zone, they never wanted to migrate to Windows updates. Under any circumstances!

I'd see this all the time when documents would be written by an attorney in Windows 97 and then need to be modified and updated for final review in a newer, richer format that the rest of the office was using. 

Wellington told me that, similarly, many older doctors he'd met told him they'd gone to medical school or did their residency program while learning how to personally use Manual Sterilizers, and came to look upon that personal knowledge as a real advantage because of their familiarity.

Something that would not be true when it comes to Automatic Sterilizers, despite the fact that they have more features -including being able to detect problems

While Manual Sterilizers do require a bit more attention to detail, there was something about not having used them a lot until after they graduated, as well as their ease of use, that these doctors found and continue to find comforting. 

Which is why they continue to use them.
And why they continue to bring them to DTS when they need repairs.
#reliability





Approaching the north entrance to Doctor's Toy Store on S.W. 30th Avenue via Pembroke Road. You can't miss the giant American flag! When you see it, drive towards it!



What you will see as you approach the southern gated entrance to Doctor's Toy Store on S.W. 30th Avenue, via Hallandale Beach Blvd. And the flag was still there...


Below: Rare moments of rest for the Doctor's Toy Store vans, which are seen everywhere throughout South Florida. If you spend even thirty minutes a day driving on any major highway between Palm Beach and Homestead and don't see one of these 12-plus vans on the road, you just aren't looking hard enough, because they're all around you.






Rob's business is noteworthy for many things, one of those being the longstanding success he's had developing and maintaining longstanding positive relationships with doctors and medical groups not just in South Florida, but also outside of Florida and the U.S.  
Because of his personal reputation for being someone who can consistently deliver what doctors need at a reasonable price and getting it to them when THEY want it, Rob and his friendly and experienced staff constantly have people coming by the showroom who are just in from Ohio or Brazil, Argentina or New Jersey. 

Or up from Coral Gables...

Busy medical professionals who are either longtime clients of Doctor's Toy Store, or, new clients who were told by doctors they know and trust that Rob was the man to see and trust.

Those sorts of relationships don't last without a serious commitment to make them work, and Rob and his dedicated staff do just that. One of the things that maintains that trust is their confidence that Doctor's Toy Store is constantly trying to have cutting-edge technology available for them.


Below: Rob and co-CEO "Doc" at the end of another long day of keeping South Florida's hard-charging and demanding medical community satisfied, inside their huge new showroom, right next to I-95.

A warehouse chock-full of every medical tool and device a doctor or practice group could possibly ever think of -and then some.

















Rob's friendly outgoing personality, quick sense of humor and near-encyclopedic knowledge of medical equipment, old and new, is amazing. 

That personality and ability of his goes a long way towards explaining how over a period of just 18 years, he's TRIPLED the size of his old showroom, and is continuing to satisfy his clients demand for medical equipment at discount prices with conscientious, top-quality customer service. 
His clients know that they are his number-one priority.

Doctor's Toy Store

2512 S.W. 30th Avenue, Hallandale Beach, FL 33009
(954) 457-0075 
1(877) DRS-TOYS  FAX: (954) 454-3916
http://drstoystore.com/

Twitter: @drstoystore https://twitter.com/drstoystore


YouTube Channelhttps://www.youtube.com/user/doctorstoystore


*DTS sells and repairs probes

*DTS has leasing and financing programs available
*Weekend and evening hours available by appointment
BUY   SELL   TRADE   REPAIR   EXPORT




*SPONSORED POST*

Friday, November 1, 2013

re Obamacare "tech surge" at The White House to fix broken Ocare website: I posit educated guess why West Wing is being so secretive re identities of this Nerd Squad A-Team meets Mission Impossible: Saving Obamacare 2.0. That answer is "optics"



CNN
Pundits' prescriptions for what ails healthcare CNN contributor Ryan Lizza and A.B. Stoddard from The Hill give Brooke Baldwin their RX for the Administration's healthcare woes. October 30th, 2013 06:32 PM ET 

Somewhat out of the blue Thursday, while reading some tweets of some of the people I religiously follow, I got to wondering if I'd actually stumbled across at least one of the reasons why the White House is being so secretive as to the identities of this Nerd Squad A-Team 
meets Mission Impossible - Saving Obamacare 2.0

Given the condescension that has come out of the WH over the past 5 years on a whole host of policy and political issues involving gender and identity politics, often greatly amplified by their echo chamber of sycophants in the Beltway press corps, especially among younger female reporters and producers, isn't it likely that seeing concrete facts or photos that confirm that the Obamacare rescue crew is largely composed of not just men but the dreaded White Men would just be too much of a PR buzzkill and "optics" problem for Team Obama to publicly countenance?


Instead of wholesome, free spirit, All-American girl-next-door and savvy computer nerd poster girl Angela Bennett (Sanda Bullock) in The Net, it's sixty-something year old Dads and Uncles with computer super-powers far beyond the ken of most normal mortals coming to the rescue.


Note what happens at 0:42.
Someone has hacked into a cabinet member's personal medical file. 

Just wondering...



Tech experts enlisted to help fix Obamacare website 
By CNN Staff 
updated 4:17 PM EDT, Thu October 31, 2013
http://www.cnn.com/2013/10/31/us/obamacare-website-experts/index.html

Thursday, October 24, 2013

#OpenGov, #OpenData and meaningful government reform finally hits Los Angeles via Control Panel L.A., a powerful website that opens city finances to quick, easy online public scrutiny, with extensive detail on how City Hall collects and spends billions of tax dollars; Plus, there's an expanded version of CompStat to track neighborhood problems online; Dear Santa... I want THAT!

#OpenGov, #OpenData and meaningful government reform finally hits Los Angeles via Control Panel L.A., a powerful website that opens city finances to quick, easy online public scrutiny, with extensive detail on how City Hall collects and spends billions of tax dollars; Plus, there's an expanded version of CompStat to track neighborhood problems online; Dear Santa... I want THAT!



















Los Angeles Times
L.A. controller unveils website to make city finances more transparent
The website gives the public access to a huge volume of data on taxpayer expenditures for police, sanitation, street repairs and other services.
By Michael Finnegan and Ben Welsh
October 24, 2013
Los Angeles' new controller moved Wednesday to open city finances to quick and easy public scrutiny online, unveiling a website with extensive detail on how City Hall collects and spends billions of dollars.
The website, Control Panel L.A., gives users access to a huge volume of data on taxpayer expenditures for police, sanitation, street repairs and other services — information that previously would have taken weeks or months to get through formal requests for records.
Read the rest of the article at
http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-1024-city-opens-books-20131024,0,3215790.story#axzz2ifPH4BOe

While Los Angeles slowly marches forward towards the digital future via their Control Panel L.A., https://controllerdata.lacity.org/ we in South Florida can only look longingly at this sort of practical and common sense tool from a great distance and sigh wistfully...

And here's another transparency effort, building upon the successful use of CompStat by LAPD that will be the first major initiative of Mayor Eric Garcetti, who took office in June, which will track progress on goals from neighborhood concerns like pot hole to streetlight repair, on a computer system that residents can check online.


Mayor Garcetti Unveils First Major Initiative: Online Accountability Plan September 26, 2013 10:41 PM
http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2013/09/26/mayor-garcetti-unveils-first-major-initiative-online-accountability-plan/

More on the effort to gets the facts and figures into the hands of taxpayers..

caforward YouTube Channel video: L.A. City Controller's plans for a more efficient, accessible city hall
"Los Angeles is one of the oldest cities in California. The City is rich with history. A lot of that history lays within City hall, with the data and information to tell a story. The City of Angels is also the most populous city in the state, with more than 3.7 million people. You'd think a city this large and this old would be at the forefront of technology. Well it's just the opposite. California Forward had the opportunity to sit down with the newly elected L.A. City Controller, Ron Galperin. He took office on July 1, 2013, as the 20th Controller. With less than two months under his belt, the Contoller explains his big plans to transform city hall."
Two-part interview. Uploaded August 27, 2013 http://youtu.be/95GoouHZTso

One on One with Los Angeles City Controller Ron Galperin
Uploaded September 3, 2013. http://youtu.be/I1idK1OuwTI


Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Personal technology that's Fun and Fascinating? That's for me! Lexus Ignition technology competition: Botiful X vs. SOLOSHOT



Lexus Vehicles video: Introducing the Lexus Ignition Project. Uploaded September 23, 2012. http://youtu.be/xhY7G8-yBrM



Lexus Vehicles video: Lexus Ignition: Botiful X product video. Botiful is a personal telepresence robot that can be controlled remotely from anywhere in the world.
Uploaded on October 8, 2012. http://youtu.be/RTdPc7_nNX4


Lexus Vehicles video: Lexus Ignition: SOLOSHOT product video. SOLOSHOT automatically rotates your camera to follow you. The new mount will keep it pointed at cars, bikes, helmets and more. Uploaded on October 8, 2012. http://youtu.be/A9mUv1VQrEY

Personal technology that's Fun and Fascinating! Lexus Ignition technology competition: Botiful X  vs. SOLOSHOT 

Lexus is committing up to $100,000 to fund stunning works of technology. Four winners will receive up to $25k each. 

Vote for Botiful X or SOLOSHOT at http://www.LexusIgnition.com, and follow conversation on Twitter at #LexusIgnition.

https://www.facebook.com/lexus/app_335311073229344

http://www.lexus.com/

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Teen girl's despicable revenge plot goes viral -and now comes the backlash to her cyberbullying! New York Observer's Jessica Roy has the scoop on the video from Putin's Russia: "Video of Russian Teens Brutally Bullying Peer Goes Viral. Bullying breeds more bullying"; @JessicaKRoy


Teen girl's despicable revenge plot goes viral -and now comes the backlash to her cyberbullying! New York Observer's Jessica Roy has the scoop on the video from Putin's Russia: "Video of Russian Teens Brutally Bullying Peer Goes Viral. Bullying breeds more bullying"; @JessicaKRoy

New York Observer
Betabeat blog
Video of Russian Teens Brutally Bullying Peer Goes Viral
Bullying breeds more bullying.
By Jessica Roy 
September 18, 2012
2:40 p.m.
It starts with a young blonde boy, who looks to be in his early teens, his face covered in dirt and bruises, bent over on his knees kissing the pink sandals of a teen girl. The video, which was filmed in Novomoskovsk–a city in western Russia–and depicts three teens violently bullying and abusing one of their peers, has gone viral on the Russian Internet.
Read the rest of the post at:



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Saturday, August 11, 2012

#London2012 - The best photos of the Olympics. Breakthroughs in photographic technology lead to astounding detail in Olympic photos in London; Getty Images shows what innovative photo technology they're using in London to capture the magical moments


Wall Street Journal Digital Network video: The Best Photos of the London Olympics.
WSJ photo director Jack Van Antwerp speaks with George Stahl, Deputy Managing Editor of DJ Newswires about how the advancements in digital technology have allowed a scale of detail and context to converge at the London 2012 Olympics, of what used to be generic sports wire photos, that are nothing short of astounding. Van Antwerp showcases a photo of swimmer Michael Phelps shot by Gabriel Bouys of AFP/Getty Images as an example of this revolution, all the more remarkable because flash photography is prohibited at the swimming venue. Uploaded August 10, 2012. http://youtu.be/K-V_mgS0ohE

The URL mentioned above is http://online.wsj.com/public/page/olympics-london.html

See also:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390443404004577581244173272220.html?mod=WSJ_OL2012_hps_PhotosModule_1#slide/1


Getty Images video: Shaun Botterill, Adrian Murrell, Marc Webbon and Georges De Keerle of Getty Images speak to the practical effects and marketing edge that clients of Getty Images' will have from their use of the latest technology at London 2012, including 3D, 360 and robotic cameras. Uploaded June 6, 2012. http://youtu.be/Okt0gVYs_zk

Gabriel Bouys: http://portfolios.afp.com/photographer/gabriel-bouys.html
AFP: http://www.afp.com/en/news

Photos by Getty Images photographers at the London 2012 Olympics:
http://www.gettyimages.co.uk/Editorial/Frontdoor/livefromlondon?isource=usa_editorial_olympics2012

Getty Images Sports Photography homepage:
http://www.gettyimages.com/EditorialImages/Sport?isource=usa-en_home_FTV_quicklinks_sports

Photos by London 2012 Olympians of other Olympians -and everything else:
http://twicsy.com/l/olympians

Getty Images YouTube Channel
http://www.youtube.com/user/gettyimages

London 2012 YouTubeChannelhttp://www.youtube.com/london2012

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Amazing! Curiosity's "Seven Minutes in Heaven"? No, its "Seven Minutes of Terror." WSJ video: The Technology Behind NASA's 'Curiosity' Landing on Mars on August 5th




Wall Street Journal Digital Network video: The Technology Behind NASA's 'Curiosity' Landing on Mars on August 5th. Posted July 2, 2012. http://youtu.be/47JanXuYlNo
Amazing! Curiosity's "Seven Minutes in Heaven"? No, its "Seven Minutes of Terror." Wall Street Journal video: The Technology Behind NASA's 'Curiosity' Landing on Mars on August 5th. 



NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory News video: Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity Rover Animation. Posted June 24, 2011.  http://youtu.be/P4boyXQuUIw

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory YouTube Channel
http://www.youtube.com/user/JPLnews/