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Email. My inbox is overflowing and all the folders and tags in the world don't seem to help. Is there anything better out there?
I'm sure there is! What sort of emails do you think are the largest problem in your case?
i think it's ridiculous that in order to get a prescription for a simple low-risk medication, i have to call my doctor, make an appointment, wait 45 minutes past when my appointment was supposed to be, and have a physical meeting with the doctor that consists of nothing but talking and takes all of 5 minutes. oh, and i have to pay way too much for it too. i should be able to do this over the phone or internet, and for less money.
This is all about liability.
Yes, I agree! Health care is notoriously hard to get into but some startups are working hard on it, some with quite some succes already. I don't expect a startup to come in and do exactly that right away and be succesful with it; it might have to be more incremental, but I'm definitely looking forward to seeing some improvement in this field come from their side.
This is often because doctors aren't paid unless they physically see you in the office. Current insurance payment policies do not recognize phone or internet consultation as billable events.*

My doctor provides this service and does so as follows:

I call my doctor leave a voicemail(Name, DOB, Phone#). A "triage nurse" (their exact wording) returns my call. I describe my symptoms and answer a few questions, these are then relayed to my doctor. If he feels the issue doesn't require a visit but requires a prescription the order is placed electronically and a nurse calls back to confirm my desired pharmacy, provide instructions and answer any additional questions.

*While some companies are making efforts to amend these policies, this holds true for the majority in my experience.

FYI, pg made a "Request for Startups" a couple of years ago, detailing problems he'd like startups to solve. You'd also know that those problems are fundable.

http://ycombinator.com/rfs.html

Yes, I'm aware of them, thanks! :) I'm interested in hearing more from other people as well. I'm not looking for any ideas to go after myself - I'm currently busy enough with uni and a startup job - but always love hearing ideas like these!
Local product search.

I really, really want to be able to search for what products are available on the high-street in any shop, based on a live stock-room database.

Imagine an application which could recommend what exactly you should do in order to obtain item X based on your location, the amount of time you had and how much money you wanted to spend.

E.g., "I'm at home and I need to pick up a pair of smart shoes. I have an hour, and £50 to spend. Where do I go?" - the application has two nearby places. Place A has smart shoes for £35, and it'll take you 30 minutes to get there, but place B Is only 10 minutes away but you'll have to spend £45 on the shoes. Trivial example, but that sounds pretty useful, no?

If anybody has a solution for this and wants to talk seriously about implementing it, get in touch with me.

This would be huge. I feel like google should be moving towards this, since it would fit in nicely with maps.
It sure would.

The solution I originally came up with would be to run a POS system which is free for shops to use, but to take a SaaS approach to the software tools shops are given, and give them an opt-out feature which is to make their stock room publicly available via an API.

For the SaaSy-ness, you'd want to offer different things that the POS system can enable with the data it has - insights into sales, and as a CRM tool, essentially. All-in-one - give them the hardware for free (but on a lease) and charge for the software, make the API publicly available and charge companies to use the API. Maps-type-applications, SatNav companies, and so on, could pay for this.

I thought about this once... one of the added benefits would be that stores and restaurants could automatically be multilingual

you'd probably have to RFID the stock in a retail setting. I feel that restaurants are a better place to start (on account of less fluidity in their offerings)

That's a nice side-effect, yes!

Restaurants are an easier place to start, and in fact there are some services which already have databases of restaurants' menus.

As for RFID - I think a lot of people go there at first when discussing a solution to this problem. It might work just fine for smaller shops but in order to get it all over you need it built into the supply chain from the moment something steps out from being manufactured.

Yes, that sounds great! I've had some similar ideas but your proposal is better than I've been able to make it so far. This sounds very useful and I think something like this will exist soon - unless online stores start seriously taking over physical stores.
I hope so. I think online stores will start encroaching into the space and it could force traditional retail to innovate a little, which could be good for this Thing.
Been researching this type of system for about two years now. The feedback from business owners has not been very positive. Some do not want their inventory to be readily available to anyone (for whatever reason). Others do not see the value of anything outside of Facebook (the social network has become their own little internet). A couple talked about how expensive software is (they are right). One or two were open to the idea. But were not ready to be used as guinea pigs for research.

One common trait has been the lack of understanding of what online sales are, and what they might mean to them. There is a lot of space to innovate here, but it has to be done in a way that is less take a risk with me, and more this is totally safe and normal to do.

Maybe, and all due respect, you're not selling it right
I was not selling it. Just researching the idea. Had I tried to sell it people would have not given me much data to crunch. I'm still convinced the idea is good. Though it will require a great amount of effort to gain momentum. Businesses are very conservative due to the fear of losing precious resources on a wrong decision. They need to know about others being successful with a product/service before they decide to try it.
Milo.com does this.
Interesting, but it doesn't seem to be working for me. I'm sure there are grocery shops in London.
My grandma wants to communicate with her family trough internet but dont know how to use a computer. Solve that for me.
make a remote control with a mic with one button on it.

the altekaker (your grandma) presses the button and asks her television to do things.

the audio is matched against previous requests, or sent to a call centre with access to her command prompt.

they open skype and call the kid she wanted to call

bill is about the same as cable per month OR for poor ppl, the audio can be sent to her grandson's phone and he can do whatever she asks and not be payed because he loves his grandma

site to swap skills. earn credits and buy other people's time. ex. designer needs programmer. does some design work earns some credits and hires programmers. not as big a market as freelancing but could be useful somewhere bewteen fiverr and elance size projects.
my puzzle is too hard to solve but my son did it nicely. - noizyoyster.com
In the U.S. dental issues are not considered a serious health problem even though you can die from it. Teeth aren't covered by "obamacare" and well, if the side of your mouth rots out then tough shit. Poor Americans have trouble affording dental insurance. I know this probably isn't as interesting as 'local product search' and the like, but I thought I would chime in. Thanks
Do you have any ideas in this space? My wife is a dentist and I've done a bit of work in the EHR space.

The real issue (at least it seems to be the issue to me) is people are lazy (or perhaps uneducated) and don't put any effort in until it is too late.

Well I had dental insurance at my old job and lost it. Then my hours rapidly declined. A filling fell out. Got laid off and haven't been able to catch up. My unemployment is about to run out but I just signed up for Humana with the same assumption that put me off from getting insurance in the first place - even if I had it I still wouldn't be able to afford the tooth pull. So I guess I'm one of the lazy and uneducated. Thanks. Regardless that's not the point. The point is that irrespective of how 'lazy' or 'uneducated' you perceive anyone to be they should still have the basic human right of not having to die from something that is simple and preventable.
I suppose if you brushed and flossed everyday like you should, you would still have to had the filling done originally? No? I suppose then that you knew you should brush and decided not to (lazy), or you were to young to know better (uneducated). Is this a false dichotomy?

Now that's out of the way.

There are many free dental clinics that would examine the tooth and pull or fill if needed. Sure, you may have to wait in line a few hours. There are also usually public health clinics that charge very little.

What city, state are you in? I'm in NC and know more about stuff in the state, but could certainly find clinics, public health, etc in other states.