So we are focusing on trying to finish Iguana by methodically going through the following areas:
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Installation and auto upgrading
This is close to complete - we’re just going through usability testing with staff and with customers
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Logging/Queuing
This is the current focus
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GIT/Translator
So everything to do with making sure the translator is working correctly to supporting full GIT workflow
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APIs - EDI, Webservices, HL7 and X12
Making sure these APIs meet the functional needs and expectations
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Monitoring
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Permissions and Security
Including LDAP
Conversion from V6 to V10
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Our goal is to get 10 customers running Iguana X solidly in production. I think with 10.1.88 we now reached the point that IguanaX is now a viable production platform. We already run about 8 IguanaX servers of our own running in production for our needs.
Our priorities are:
Stability - getting to zero memory leaks and no crashes.
Usability - getting the onboarding process completed to make the product easy to use.
Compatibility - doing everything we can so our customers that have trusted us for decades can have as smooth of a transition as possible on to the new platform with their existing interfaces.
So to keep laser focused it means there are a lot of things we are saying no to, at this stage:
Chrome and Edge Browsers are the only supported browsers.
GIT. Git is required to use IguanaX.
Network Access - at this stage it is not possible to run IguanaX in a closed environment.
Making these deliberate choices of focus means we can deliver IguanaX faster to market and give everybody a better experience than by trying too early to support these options.
After we get these things done it is about scalability.
Like to help us get there faster? You can. All it takes is doing what is required to get one IguanaX server in production.
Happy to discuss.
Eliot Muir
CEO