When designing data systems to be used by internal businesses, whether ERP or CRM systems, they have to be designed to be able to keep up with the fingers of professional data-entry people. These aren’t your standard internet folks who want to buy a widget on Amazon, these are people who will be putting in hundreds of orders a day. People who know every button and how many tabs it is until they need to hit the enter key and move on. Here is an example of a dropdown that can trigger a local filter of a JSON object which avoids us making a call-back to the server.
Why HIPPA doesn’t require any specific security or encryption
After what must have been an enormous amount of political pressure, the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) made a decision that health insurance companies are not required to encrypt the data stored on their servers. The HIPAA ruling recommends using encryption if the health insurer believes it’s an appropriate measure to mitigate risk. But lacking a specific requirement essentially leaves it up to each company to decide how to protect its data.
Initially, our system developers were horrified by the implication. A bit of reasoning settled people down a bit.
Kendo Context Menus
When developing online databases, it’s often frustrating to lose the right-click ability that a normal desktop system would have. Instead, the user is presented with a bunch of options that are unrelated to the system – or things you’d prefer them not to have at all! Kendo offers a Context Menu feature that simple and straightforward. read more…
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