One of the many unwritten rules of the Ad Hoc Harley award is that you can't earn it more than once. I'm not going to change that now, but one of the previous recipients has done it again. And for that, I'm awarding the rare (and heretofore never previous awarded) serious chrome upgrade for this contributors latest piece of work.
If you haven't heard about SUSHI (and no, I'm not talking about what I eat when I travel to standards meetings), and you build FHIR implementation guides, or implement FHIR resources, you NEED to learn about it, and the FHIR Shorthand language for creating FHIR Implementation Guide Resources.
Here's why: Starting at 10:30 on Saturday, and working about 16 hours straight, I was able to do with SUSHI what in the past would have taken me 5 to 10 days of implementation effort. As a result, I managed to put together an IHE Profile implementation guide from scratch in record time.
The ability to create implementation guides, value sets, capability statements, coding systems, any sample resource you might ever want in this simple language is simply fantastic.
So, here goes:
And furthermore, no man is an island, and no open source project like this can possibly be done alone. So I get to repeat the Bike Week award (originally awarded to the Redoc Dozen).
Chris is working with a team of developers at MITRE that includes:
Let's give them all, and MITRE a round of applause.
If you haven't heard about SUSHI (and no, I'm not talking about what I eat when I travel to standards meetings), and you build FHIR implementation guides, or implement FHIR resources, you NEED to learn about it, and the FHIR Shorthand language for creating FHIR Implementation Guide Resources.
Here's why: Starting at 10:30 on Saturday, and working about 16 hours straight, I was able to do with SUSHI what in the past would have taken me 5 to 10 days of implementation effort. As a result, I managed to put together an IHE Profile implementation guide from scratch in record time.
The ability to create implementation guides, value sets, capability statements, coding systems, any sample resource you might ever want in this simple language is simply fantastic.
So, here goes:
This certifies that
Chris Moesel of MITRE
has hereby been recognized AGAIN for awesome work with the rarely awarded and highly coveted Serious Chrome Upgrade.
Chris is working with a team of developers at MITRE that includes:
ngfreiter (Nicolas Freiter)
mint-thompson (Mint Thompson)
kjmahalingam (Dylan Mahalingam)
jafeltra (Julia Afeltra)
Let's give them all, and MITRE a round of applause.
No comments:
Post a Comment