Brian Eaton

My list of accomplishments includes ideating, concepting, writing, developing and reworking copy for top-tier international clients. I delivered an aggressive small-to-medium business (SMB) strategy for Sony VAIO laptop computers; integrated print and broadcast resources with my own savvy to architect Chrysler LLC’s online identity; and created the voice that The City of Toronto wanted to show-off to immigrants and investors.

Articles by Brian Eaton

Digital tech transforms radiology training in BC

Moving from traditional film to a digital imaging system

E-questions for an e-age

More than 10 years ago, as he watched the Web start to explode, Dr. Alex Jadad had a feeling it was going to change the world, -- and health care. He was in a position to know. At the time, Jadad, founder and director of the Centre for Global eHealth Innovation at the University Health Network in Toronto, was completing a PhD. in knowledge synthesis at Oxford University. Essentially, he was distilling large amounts of disparate information to get at what is really important.

Web keeps tabs on sick kids

Following up on patients after they are discharged from a hospital's emergency department can be time consuming, complex, and costly. However The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto

Senior Epidemiologist at PHAC

The threat from epidemics

Centralized call centre approach pays off for Halton

Citizen satisfaction with Halton region's call centre is remarkably high

New proteomics tool revolutionizes disease diagnosis

Study of the body's proteins

Outsourcing

Outsourcing critical infrastructure management is the name of the game today for many Canadian enterprises in the private and public sectors. And it's also the route Health Canada has chosen to ensure the security and effectiveness of its server systems

Open source not quite the panacea, say three schools

Before welcoming students back in September, three cash strapped schools tried their luck cutting costs by purchasing software that included source code with no license fees. But, with limited budgets, the three found open source technology was not the answer, according to Microsoft Corp.

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