Thank you Cedric and Alan for your explanations, I think I understand a
bit better now. At the risk of offending all members of the forum, the
one that favour this or that product, here is a comment.
It appears that MD3 & BP both need to be installed on each machine that
is going to be interacting with data in the practice. This is NOT
different from the old MD2 in both MD3 & BP (except for the DBF versus
Sql stuff). So, if one takes out the Sql backend for a moment, what is
in essence the real differences between MD2, MD3 & BP?.
Or is it just the Sql bit prominently displayed on product advertising?
Mario
Cedric Meyerowitz wrote:
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Mario Ruiz
Sent: Wednesday, 21 December 2005 10:33 PM
To: General Practice Computing Group Talk
Subject: Re: [GPCG_TALK] Picking another package other than MD2
Importance: High
sorry my ignorance, why does each PC needs to be configured?
Mario.
-----Original Message-----
The other reason why BP is configured "Per User" is that the majority of
settings are stored in the database. (Major upside to this: Therefore they
are also backed up in the BP back etc)
In MD2 they are in the registry. So if the user either moves to another
computer or gets a new computer they lose their settings (Only way to back
these up in MD2 is back up the relevant registry keys and restore them).
What MD3 does I don't know. Maybe John or another user can tell us.
Cedric
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