> That certainly gave me pause. A pilot for the anticoagulation clinic > is almost certainly more achievable (less work yet to do / shorter > time frame) than to have a web app developed, yes? Hm, given a dedicated and skilled web programmer it might take less time. It might. There's the rub.
Doing both takes double the time, however. And doing a web app (besides I can't do it) means double time to me since I will not be satisfied with a web app myself. > >b) what good is it to let them look at a web frontend and then > > tell them "well, yeah, but that's not what we > > recommend/focus on/think should be used" ? > A web frontend (even if it is read-only) could be invaluable when Ah, what an excellent twist! Read only ... It may certainly appear quite magic to be able to view a patient's EMR while doing a home visit right from their own machine ... :-) > Even something basic would contribute to (as Tim put it in January) > the *plausible promise* of more to come. Agreed. > A person could be a wonderful performing artist, about whom no-one > knows because they cannot get a booking or "on the table". They may > disdain corporate / commercial aspects of the industry, especially > "manufactured" successes, and may prefer to quietly hone their craft. > A Chinese woman who started out "assigned" to be a foot juggler has, > over time, achieved great acclaim as a magician, and such success > stories do happen. But that is an individual story, also it took her > 15-20 years. Some might say "you want something now, use Oscar" but > I would rather say "if I can help to get parts of GnuMed running in > 6-12 months, I would rather do that" :-) I have no grudge with anyone "properly" promoting GnuMed in any way they see fit. I am just saying I ain't any good at such stuff myself. Karsten -- GPG key ID E4071346 @ wwwkeys.pgp.net E167 67FD A291 2BEA 73BD 4537 78B9 A9F9 E407 1346 _______________________________________________ Gnumed-devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnumed-devel
