Which direction to go?
-
That would be a nice resolution to this problem for sure!
-
@Dashrender said:
Patients often bring in DVD's that contain XRays that were taken at other clinics. These disks typically include a viewer built into the disk so no local software is required to see the DICOM images.
Last spring Microsoft released a patch that broke most of those viewers. The manufactures of those viewers very quickly put out a (in most cases) not free update that customers could purchase to solve this issue.
My office purchased this update at my prompting immediately (it wasn't bad - I think it was $300 or so and brought us 4 years newer to the current version).
My dilemma - do I solve the problem internally by deploying DICOM viewing software everywhere that I have to now maintain - or push back and make the continuous calls to these hospitals and clinics telling them that they need to update? (Frankly I want the pissed off staff to call them so the pressure is even hotter on the other hospitals and clinics)
Pass thru DVD drive into VM running working unpatched version of OS and live happily.
-
@KOOLER said:
@Dashrender said:
Patients often bring in DVD's that contain XRays that were taken at other clinics. These disks typically include a viewer built into the disk so no local software is required to see the DICOM images.
Last spring Microsoft released a patch that broke most of those viewers. The manufactures of those viewers very quickly put out a (in most cases) not free update that customers could purchase to solve this issue.
My office purchased this update at my prompting immediately (it wasn't bad - I think it was $300 or so and brought us 4 years newer to the current version).
My dilemma - do I solve the problem internally by deploying DICOM viewing software everywhere that I have to now maintain - or push back and make the continuous calls to these hospitals and clinics telling them that they need to update? (Frankly I want the pissed off staff to call them so the pressure is even hotter on the other hospitals and clinics)
Pass thru DVD drive into VM running working unpatched version of OS and live happily.
that would require either a VDI setup, or SA on every workstation, Both options as more costly than me maintaining the patched version of the software on the workstations directly.
-
@Dashrender said:
that would require either a VDI setup, or SA on every workstation
Running a VM locally requires neither.
-
@Jason said:
@Dashrender said:
that would require either a VDI setup, or SA on every workstation
Running a VM locally requires neither.
no, running a VM locally requires a second full license purchased for that machine.
-
There's always the option of terminal servers.
-
it's all a moot point now. The hospital is going to get this fixed for us.
But i would never pay the price for a TS/RDS server to support this one app - plus I'd have to map the cd drive into the session, etc, etc... uh.. no thanks - to many hassles.
-
@Dashrender said:
But i would never pay the price for a TS/RDS server to support this one app
We pay for ones just to support flash/java.. Keeps that crap off the desktops.
-
@Jason said:
@Dashrender said:
But i would never pay the price for a TS/RDS server to support this one app
We pay for ones just to support flash/java.. Keeps that crap off the desktops.
How did training go for users that needed to use TS/RDS for somethings, but not others? How do you manage favorites between their desktop and the RDS session? Do you only publish IE for those things? of a full desktop?
It's still pretty darn expensive no matter what way you slice it...
-
@Dashrender said:
How did training go for users that needed to use TS/RDS for somethings, but not others? How do you manage favorites between their desktop and the RDS session? Do you only publish IE for those things? of a full desktop?
It's still pretty darn expensive no matter what way you slice it...
It's no different than users than need to use other RDS for GreatPlains and other applications via RDP. We don't do published apps as it causes some issues with some apps, it's all full desktops. We don't do anything with their favorites, they just copy paste a link to it if they need something with flash or java, It's not meant to be their main workspace just for sites that get blocked at the network firewall (Palo Alto's in the datacenter) level for desktops because we block flash and java. Doesn't really cost much to add an additional RDP server (you just need user cals for max concurrent users, not for all users) , and the cost is very minimal compared to the impact on security java and flash have, many infections come from those anymore, and we have to report any infections or breaches publicly as a publicly traded company. IMO a RDS is what in most cases should be considered over VDI, a VDI only needs to be looked at if there are limitations that RDS could not handle.