Open dental software crack cracked#
However, once you have cracked their encoding scheme, you need to figure out how it coincides with the numbering scheme in OD so you can match the proper radiograph with the patient in OD. Most of the bigger companies try to create as confusing a scheme as possible because it makes it harder for you switch software vendors that way. It will get tricky if they create their file names with parts of different variables, such as first 3 letters of last name + year of birth + date of xray and then convert that whole mess to Hex. Most companies will use Hexadecimal (Base 16) in some form because it's ubiqitous and allows them the flexibility to encode longer decimal strings in a shorter format (which is important if your file names are limited to a certain number of characters). If it was used as a standalone, then the best place to start is to call Gendex tech support and ask them (nicely!) if they would mind telling you what their encoding scheme is for saving xrays. Were you using Vixwin as a standalone or was it bridged to your previous PM system? If so, you'll have to change the folder name back. Start with just one folder, and double check all of the consequences to make sure that doesn't confuse VixWin. One other option is that maybe you really CAN change they names of each of the existing folders, and that will solve the problem.
In that case, we'll have to get a little bit creative. But if they look like 1234, then we might have a problem. For example, if they look like AB1234, then there will be no chance of collisions. You (or we) should look through your old folders to see what kind of format they are in. So that when you use the bridge you end up looking at some other patient's images. The only thing I'm really worried about is if an old key for one patient matches a new key for a different patient. You could import images from the old folders to the new ones using the VixWin interface. Can you verify this? Due to limitations in VixWin, you might be stuck moving to new folders, and leaving the old ones there as sort of archives. Now, when you pass VixWin a new patient Id that does not match an existing folder, I believe it sensibly creates a new folder with that Id. Do you have a way to verify this? Can you look through your image folders to see what they look like? So if all the folders are named according to old patient id's, then that would explain why you can't "change" them. I think VixWin simply names the folders where images are stored according to the patientId's. I think VixWin avoids using much of an internal database. You're using the new VixWin bridge, not the old one which requires QuickLink, right? OK, I've looked at our code.