Remote working with UDS VDI for healthcare at the ASLAN Awards

Remote working with UDS VDI for healthcare at the ASLAN Awards

Our desktop virtualization project at Los Arcos del Mar Menor University General Hospital (HULAMM) is a candidate for the ASLAN Awards to Digital Transformation Projects in Public Administrations. Thanks to its commitment to VDI technology with UDS Enterprise, this hospital could react quickly to the state of alarm’s declaration due to the pandemic and send all professionals who could carry out their tasks remotely to work from home.

They were also able to help the Murcian Health Service (SMS) provide this service to Pharmacology, Oncology, Hematology, and Microbiology, the unit responsible for analyzing PCR. In total, hundreds of professionals distributed by different public hospitals in the Region of Murcia work remotely using virtual desktops or remotely accessing hospital computers with UDS Enterprise.

Guidelines for sustainable Open Source communities

Guidelines for sustainable Open Source communities

The European Open Source Observatory (OSOR) team has published a handbook that includes a series of guidelines for creating sustainable Open Source communities in the public sector. Public officials, administrators, project leaders, IT developers and anyone interested in open software will find in this document practical advice to build communities that last over time.

Recording: eLearning & remote working with Nutanix and UDS

Recording: eLearning & remote working with Nutanix and UDS

The current health situation has changed the priorities of IT departments, which have to provide an efficient response to the new needs of remote working and distance learning. The binomial UDS Enterprise and Nutanix offers a definitive solution with a solvency and high-level technical features that have positioned it as the quintessential hyper-converged VDI tool in today’s market.

Keys to making the move to Open Source a success

Keys to making the move to Open Source a success

The change from a proprietary to a free and Open Source environment is often looked on with mistrust by employees, especially when it involves adapting to something new. The municipality of Eyüpsultan in Turkey decided to implement the Open Source model for their computer desktops. They managed to do it successfully and with great criticism from users following a simple premise: the new Open Source desktops had to look a lot like the ones used by workers.

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