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DATE | 2006-02-27 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Vista and GNU/Linux - paid gigs
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Vista sees end-to-end Linux in its future Story originally published February 22, 2006
WorldVista, the not-for-profit organization developing an open-source version of Vista, the clinical information system used by the Veterans Health Administration, has announced a partnership with developer CodeWeavers of St. Paul, Minn., that will allow a version of Vista to run end-to-end on a Linux operating system. Currently, a portion of Vista that includes its user interface, its computerized patient record system, or CPRS, runs on Microsoft Corp.'s proprietary Windows operating system.
CodeWeavers has created a CPRS-specific version of its CrossOver Office translator product to run CPRS on computers with the Linux open source operating system, the company said in a news release this week. The translator employs Wine, an open-source software developed over the past 12 years that enables other Windows programs to run on Linux.
Site license fees for Windows can be a barrier to adoption of clinical IT systems, particularly in the Third World, where WorldVista is aiming to boost IT use, according to Joseph Dal Molin, vice president for business development for WorldVista.
"It probably won't matter much in North America," Dal Molin said, but, "if you're looking at hundreds of users in a hospital in India, it mounts up."
Wine has been used for years to run Microsoft Office and other Windows applications on Linux systems without slowing system performance, Dal Molin said.
More than 85% of CPRS' functions can be run on the new translator, with completion of the porting project expected "in the very near future," according to the company.
Pricing for the CPRS adaptation of the software has not been set, but Jon Parshall, chief operating officer of CodeWeavers, said for North American users it will likely run about $40 for the first year, with discounts for volume sales and not-for-profit and government organizations bringing the per-license costs below $20.
Annual support costs would run around $10 to $20 per user, Parshall said. In the Third World, he said, the company hopes to negotiate a blanket license with the government of the country where Vista is being used.
The entire Vista program is available free for the downloading from the Veterans Affairs Department, but it is set up to run on Windows and Cache, a proprietary version of the MUMPS database and programming language sold by InterSystems Corp.
WorldVista releases a version of Vista that has been adapted to run on GT.M, an open-source iteration of MUMPS developed by Sanchez Computer Associates. The addition of a finished Wine-based Windows translator would complete WorldVista's all-open-source development scheme.
"I think the most exciting part of the announcement is the whole notion of open-source software and what it can do for the human race," said Parshall. CodeWeavers does about half its business overseas, and that is where Parshall said he sees the bulk of the market will be for its CPRS adaptation.
Several national governments in Europe are embracing open source software in a move against the perceived hegemony of Microsoft operating systems, Parshall said. In the Third World, the interest in open source is driven more by financial necessity. South Africa, for example, is considering moving the entire government sector to Linux-based operating systems, he said.
"The same model might end up applying to Vista," Parshall said. Healthcare officials in Mexico, Panama, Malaysia, Egypt and India have expressed interest in adapting Vista to their operations. In Mexico, for example, the Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, has launched the GT.M-based version of CPRS at 12 hospitals in Mexico City, Monterey and Guadalajara.
"In places like India and Ghana, it's going to be a good enough solution," Parshall said. "We, as an organization, are really committed to bringing the cost of computing down to the point where it's not just wealthy Western nations that can benefit from healthcare information technology.
"We need to get paid for this, but none of us at CodeWeavers wants to buy a 15,000-square-foot mansion beside the ocean," he said.
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