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From: | Raymond Omeni |
Subject: | Re: [Health] GNU HEALTH LIVE CD |
Date: | Fri, 10 Jan 2014 22:30:46 +0100 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.2; rv:24.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/24.2.0 |
Dear Luis,
Thanks for the pointer. I see that the link is for a demo tryton server. Does the web client work with any installed tryton server? After installing tryton server, will the web client be ported to, for instance, https://myserver:8000/ ? If not, are there additional steps we can take to activate the web client? Regards, Raymond Omeni On 1/10/2014 9:27 PM, Luis Falcon wrote: Dear Raymond On 09/01/14 23:21, Raymond Omeni wrote:Hi. Is there a web interface/client that works with the tryton server? Can the tryton server be ported to a web browser, so that portable devices such as Ipads can access and exchange information? This liberty has a lot of attraction for doctors, who by the way have become very fond of tablets and smart phones, especially at work.You can check the web client interface here : https://demo.tryton.org:8000/ BestRegards, Raymond On 12/18/2013 5:08 PM, Luis Falcon wrote:Hi Constantine ! On 17/12/13 22:19, Kostis Mousafiris wrote:Hi Luis, thanks a lot for a truly extra-quick answer!t Let me try to sum my feelings up in a more concise way: I love free/libre software, so I will NOT be put off by just the amount of technical knowledge required in order to set GNU Health correctly up and running. However, let us not forget that many others will just feel frightened/ intimidated/ discouraged by the intricacies of the set up procedure.... So, yes, I will go on and try again (not with openSuSE though :-) until I obtain a fully working version of it (and of course I will let the list participants know when I get there!)Great ! Please report any issues you find in the process, so we can improve it and make sure that work in as many Operating Systems.On the other hand, despite I do agree with you that a "real-world" install should be done in a way that should indeed offer ample possibilities for a tailor-made set up, I still maintain that if we had a "live" pre-installed CD/DVD, it could be an excellent attraction for new comers to give it a go and become convinced that GNU Health does work and that it can live up to the challenge of organizing a robust health service.Agree. We need somebody from the community that will take that role. We should have an ISO as per each new release, and always thinking of it as a demo environment. We can include the current PG dump for that release. All the best,Thanks again for giving some consideration to this discussion that I and Raymond brought up. Friendly regards and appreciation for your excellent work! Constantine On 17/12/2013 08:29 μμ, Luis Falcon wrote:Dear Kostis and Raymond On 16/12/13 17:02, Kostis Mousafiris wrote:Dear all, I am using Ubuntu and Debian as my two basic distros and so, I am all too hesitant in jumping into an entirely different distribution such as OpenSUSE.... Despite my eagerness about GNU Health, I do not think I will embark onto OpenSUSE at all. I still remain of the same opinion as Raymond and I really feel that a live CD of a pre-installed instance of GNU Health would make it so much more appealing for people not-technically-adept to at least give it a go. Thanks however for listening to my thoughts.We don't have a problem at all by having a version-dependent GNU Health ISO (live CD / USB ), but I truly think that is best to use the installation method on Wikibook. Large systems such as GNU Health have dependencies, operating system specific instructions, database setup, Tryton configuration (ERP, security, modules, updates, connectivity ... ) that need to be addressed. This has lead me to put the focus on documenting the installation. To test the system we have the Community Database and we also have the database dumps for each release, so you can either connect via Internet to the demo DB or install the DB locally. So, summing up, I think that for demo, we can make a Live CD / USB, but for real world, production servers, the installation method should be tailored to your needs, and to achieve that you need the use the installation method from Wikibooks. Of course, there is room for improvement in both the scripts and the documentation, and we are working on both. Just my 2 cents :) Let me know your thoughts. All the best,Constantine On 16/12/2013 06:30 μμ, Raymond Omeni wrote:Axel, I have waited for Kostis's response concerning ''the one-click'' installation of GNU Health on OpenSUSE to ascertain the ease of installation on openSUSUE. But going by the instructions on the link you provided in the email to Kostis, I would say it takes quite a number of clicks to install GNU Health on OpenSUSE. Majority of those who are in position to evaluate and enventually adopt GNU Health may not be people with horned skills in IT, therefore if the installation involves too many technical details, there will be a preference for an easier EMR installation. I know it may require a lot of work from the GNU Health technical crew but in my opinion(and I guess the opinion of many silent voices), a live CD of pre-installed GNU Health with the option of installation to hard disk is the way to go. This way, people can easily easily evaluate GNU Health and decide whether to install it or not on hard drive. Best regards, Raymond Omeni On 12/1/2013 2:41 PM, Axel Braun wrote:Kostis, Am Sonntag, 1. Dezember 2013, 10:46:39 schrieb Kostis Mousafiris:However, I have to admit defeat as all my attempts were unsuccessful and even when I asked for help from some more experienced people (with GNU/Linux admin knowledge), we were not able to get it up and running!!please give it a try and install GNU Health on openSUSE, as described here: http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/GNU_Health/Operating_System-Specific_Notes#Installing_GNU_Health_on_openSUSE My goal was to create an easy, dashboard-like installation. openSUSE is nowadays a one-click installation...gnu health should now be as well Give it a try and post your results Thanks Axel PS: and pls use a valid Mailadress: <address@hidden> bounces with domain has no valid mail exchangers |
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