IBM Beacon Awards recognize IBM Business Partners for their technical excellence, industry expertise, and innovative solutions. Kanteron Systems was named a winner of a 2013 IBM Beacon Award for Healthcare and Life Sciences. This honor is awarded each year in recognition of a select number of IBM Business Partners who have delivered not only innovative solutions but have set the standards for business excellence, ingenuity, and creation of an exceptional client experience.

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Kanteron Systems is honored to have been awarded “Best Clinical Poster Award” at Digital Pathology Association Congress 2012 Pathology Visions, held in Baltimore (USA), October 28th-October 31st. The poster was titled: “Integrating Open Source Digital Pathology (PACS, LIS, DICOM or non-DICOM, EHR, web)” and was presented and authored by Jorge Cortell CEO & President, Kanteron Systems USA, Inc.

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Kanteron Systems introduces an online demo to try the speed of our digital pathology image (Whole Slide Image) viewer: https://pathoarchive.kanteron.com/As you try it, keep in mind there might be thousands of concurrent users, your bandwidth may be limited, and most important: you will be browsing 2 to 6 GIGABYTE images (from different scanner manufacturers and formats, DICOM ready)… in real time!! with a zero footprint viewer (no need to install any additional software).

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As seen in The Guardian, Building Better Healthcare, BBC, Healthcare IT News, E-Health Insider, Open Health News, eHealth Europe, Hospital IT Europe, UK Government Online, UK Government Opportunities, and Healthcare Today: London’s Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital (GOSH) is making a major shift towards integrating Apple technology – benefiting staff and patients. A key project has been in Cardiology where clinicians now use iPads and iMacs for instant access to 3D images of patients’ hearts while planning for surgery, or even in theatre.

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According to a Kauffman study: Among Emerging Growth Companies firms that made IPOs from 1996 through 2000, only 29 percent were still operating 10 years later. However, acquisition was a far more common outcome than was failure (55 percent vs. 16 percent). Biomedical IPOs had the highest survival and lowest bankruptcy rates among all sectors; the highest failure rates were in manufacturing and retail.

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