Go offline with the Player FM app!
A Look at BridgeLink's Fork of the Open Source Mirth Connect
Manage episode 502361742 series 3255313
Recently, NextGen decided to move Mirth from their previous open source and commercial license to a now purely commercial license. Considering the breadth of adoption of Mirth Connect for data sharing in healthcare, this was a big move by NextGen which will now force all Mirth Connect users to make a decision. If Mirth Connect users want to stick with the open source licensing model that Mirth started with, there are a couple of orgnaizations that have chosen to fork Mirth Connect in order to continue the open source licensing option or they can continue with NextGen's commercial license.
For those not familiar with open source licenses, forks are a common thing in open source projects when the community has a different view on where the software should go in the future. Plus, it's one of the powers of the open source license. The Mirth Connect code set is available for anyone to take it and continue developing it as they see fit by forking the project into a new open source project. That's exactly what Innovar Healthcare and other members of the community decided to do when they forked Mirth Connect and created BridgeLink.
To help the Mirth community learn more about the new open source alternative to Mirth Connect, BridgeLink, I sat down with Loyd Bittle, CEO and Founder at Innovar Healthcare, and Drew McNichol, Executive Director at Technology By Design. Bittle and his team are leading the BridgeLink effort and McNichol has chosen to transition from Mirth Connect to BridgeLink for a number of New York's HIEs (Health Information Exchanges) starting with HEALTHeLINK.
Learn more about Technology By Design: https://techbd.org/
Learn more about Innovar Healthcare: https://www.innovarhealthcare.com/
Healthcare IT Community: https://www.healthcareittoday.com/
725 episodes
Manage episode 502361742 series 3255313
Recently, NextGen decided to move Mirth from their previous open source and commercial license to a now purely commercial license. Considering the breadth of adoption of Mirth Connect for data sharing in healthcare, this was a big move by NextGen which will now force all Mirth Connect users to make a decision. If Mirth Connect users want to stick with the open source licensing model that Mirth started with, there are a couple of orgnaizations that have chosen to fork Mirth Connect in order to continue the open source licensing option or they can continue with NextGen's commercial license.
For those not familiar with open source licenses, forks are a common thing in open source projects when the community has a different view on where the software should go in the future. Plus, it's one of the powers of the open source license. The Mirth Connect code set is available for anyone to take it and continue developing it as they see fit by forking the project into a new open source project. That's exactly what Innovar Healthcare and other members of the community decided to do when they forked Mirth Connect and created BridgeLink.
To help the Mirth community learn more about the new open source alternative to Mirth Connect, BridgeLink, I sat down with Loyd Bittle, CEO and Founder at Innovar Healthcare, and Drew McNichol, Executive Director at Technology By Design. Bittle and his team are leading the BridgeLink effort and McNichol has chosen to transition from Mirth Connect to BridgeLink for a number of New York's HIEs (Health Information Exchanges) starting with HEALTHeLINK.
Learn more about Technology By Design: https://techbd.org/
Learn more about Innovar Healthcare: https://www.innovarhealthcare.com/
Healthcare IT Community: https://www.healthcareittoday.com/
725 episodes
All episodes
×Welcome to Player FM!
Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.