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NZOSS Company Supporter

  • TechnologyWise

    TechnologyWise is an IT service provider and support company specialising in the business and education markets.

    Our team is committed to building IT systems for the future of your business. We have a strong focus on open source software, which enables us to provide cost-effective business solutions.

    Based in Tauranga, TechnologyWise supports networks, servers and PCs for all systems and platforms, ncluding Linux, Mac & Windows. We also install and support web-based applications such as CRM systems, content management systems and wikis.

    Website: 
    http://technologywise.co.nz/
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New Zealand Open Source Project

  • Koha
    Website: 
    http://www.koha.org

    Koha is a library management system originally written by New Zealander Chris Cormack way back in 1999. It is used by 100s of libraries worldwide and has over 40 active developers. Koha is also now based in the States as part of a stable of products from open source library provider Liblime. Koha enjoys strong support from the libraries here in New Zealand that contributed to Koha’s development, and continue to use it to this day. Horowhenua Library Trust in particular were early to recognise Koha’s strengths.

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  • Albany Senior High School - Using Open Source(3 days)
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Thank Goodness for Small Things

Submitted by donchristie on October 19, 2009 - 12:32.

I attended a lecture last week by Professor Rowena Cullen of Victoria University, School of Information Management.

It was a very interesting talk where she spoke about the importance of a barriers to using and analysing information in the Health sector. She put IT investments in the context of health outcomes and used NZ and UK case studies to demonstrate how poor the returns on IT investment have been.

My own belief is that this complaint applies to a lot of IT spending across both the public and private sectors.

She finishes the paper with the following comments:

"Firstly, let us go back to the mantra of Open standards, Open architecture, Open source, and Open access, which I believe are the solutions to the problems I have outlined. This approach is the only way to overcome the silos of healthcare which are currently preventing interoperability and the exchange of information which is necessary to improve the quality, safety, productivity and sustainability of our healthcare system."

And specifically, with regard to the electronic health record:

"A distributed model, based on a “safe, shared, transferable patient electronic health record” based on international open standards, open architectures, and, I sincerely hope, open source software., managed by mandate by the National Health Board. It seems that as the field of Health IT matures (it is in reality barely 15–20 years old) consensus is building on the way forward."

This thinking is quite profound given the amount of money spent on IT in health and Government in general and given the academic foundation of Rowena Cullen's research and comments.

Attached are the as distributed by Professor Cullen. These, along with a video of the talk will be online on the Victoria University site, soon.

AttachmentSize
application/pdfWhy_IT_matters.pdf296.9 KB
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