Friday, July 06, 2012
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My 5-year-old

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By Robert "Bob" Cooke

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A five-year-old human has a pretty advanced view of the world as development stages for children go. Most are in kindergarten. Obviously there’s still a long road ahead to adulthood, but the possibilities are endless. The iPhone recently turned 5 too, and, for a 5-year-old, it has made an indelible mark on the world. In particular, the way people think of and consume software.

Now if you ask me, the iPhone (in fact any iPlatform) appears to be a mobile cash register for Apple. In fact, I registered, I put in my share for Apple (and whomever else) this past weekend when I downloaded Neil Young’s last 2 albums, and a 99-cent new weather app with a very cool new user interface I just had to try, I’d bet some of you did too. The point here is that many of us are now trained to consume software this way, as it is just plain easier all around.

Look even just a bit deeper, and I think its clear that the transformation created by this new paradigm for software delivery fundamentally changed the industry. Prior to this, small startup vendors relied on shareware models to distribute software. No matter how capable the shareware was, it never had a real chance in competing with the giant marketing budgets of Microsoft, Adobe, and so on.

Enter the App store in 2008. Buying and downloading software was now just about as simple as downloading music, which the platform had already trained us to do. It completely and fundamentally changed the paradigm from the typical CD insert (and finding said CD), yes/yes/next/ok sequence, to “click/smiley face”. A whole new world was formed, and you could transform and extend your computer (aka iPhone) in very interesting and fun ways. All of a sudden making software was cool again with new innovations; startups were all formed around developing for this platform, and delivering using this paradigm (many high school students have even formed startups).

Yeah sure, Apple may likely be the big winner here, but I contend that the software industry and users also won pretty big. The playing field was leveled. Innovation and function had a chance over big marketing budgets.  Users had many more choices.

Now, lets just squint a bit and look at the software platforms for our little world of medical imaging. What would the world look like if instead of feeling trapped into buying that little zero-footprint viewer from your PACS vendor to bolt on the side of your system, you could choose from a range of integrated solutions that really worked together (no slight against the heros who developed DICOM and HL-7).

Look across our industry. There is lots of innovation, but you have to search to find it. It’s generally eclipsed by the big marketing budgets of the “you know whos.” And, it still isn’t a slam-dunk to make it all work together, despite all the great standards. And, oh by the way, one could easily speculate that neither the vendor nor user will have as much money in the past to play with (ref: Judge Roberts).

So lets just tilt our head a bit while squinting. Is it possible that such a model could work for our industry? 

Could our own little corner of the world still be in the terrible twos?

 

 

Posted by cristen bolan at 07/06/2012 10:03:06 AM | 


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