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Re: [Health] Web Based GUI for GNUHealth


From: Axel Braun
Subject: Re: [Health] Web Based GUI for GNUHealth
Date: Mon, 30 Jun 2014 11:59:06 +0200
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Am Montag, 30. Juni 2014, 00:10:58 schrieb Raymond Omeni:
 
> In a the coming weeks I shall be making a presentation for EMR based on
> GNUHealth to the Commissioner of Health in a State in my country.
> Problem is that the emphasis has been on availability of Web Based Gui
> for administration.

Strange, esp for admin purposes most would consider a fat client, and for end 
users a web-GUI

> The prospective client expects access to the server by doctors using
> browsers on tablets, computers etc.
> 
> Question is: Could GNUHealth be structured in a way that a single script
> can install GNUHealth modules and a web GUI for administration? While it
> is not my intention to make comparisons, OpenEMR has single install
> packages with web GUI that makes it really easy to get the software up
> and running in a very short time.
> 
> Sao GUI for Tryton has been in development for a while now as I
> understand, but even Sao will require several lines of installation
> instructions to get it running - the #1 hindrance for not- so- IT savvy
> installers.
> 
> The OpenSUSE platform build project for GNUhealth must be commended,
> though I believe that users should have the liberty of installing
> GNUHealth on any linux machine that has all dependencies installed.

Sure. The openSUSE build service des not stop your from making the choise for 
your preferred distro.

> Also, In my opinion, locking GNUHealth to OpenSUSE because of Tryton
> client-server compatibility and upgrade issues can be avoided. Instead
> of a tryton client, we could have the tryton server controlled from a
> web gui from any device with a browser.

openSUSE is not locking you from anything. The idea behind building Tryton on 
openSUSE was 
- have precompiled packages for every openSUSE release
- have all dependencies automatically resolved on the system side (so you dont 
have to bother with it during installation)
- make use of available packages (e.g. from devel:languages:python, for the 
a.m. dependencies))
- install using system tools (zypper) for installation and upgrade
- make use of standard system features like automatic start/restart using 
systemd

Once Tryton is available on openSUSE, GNU Health was build additionally as 
aditional module on Tryton. It is intended to run in a production environment 
, not for testing with multiple (virtualenv) instances.

HTH, if not, let me know your questions

Best regards
Axel

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