Roy Jakobs
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
You have the UI experience. You kind of rethink about the use case of minimizing the time to go through a scan because we know it's not a pleasant experience. So we actually developed AI that increases the speed of a scan by three times. So they use the MR, but they use the MR with our smart speed AI functionality, so actually they can reduce the time that a patient has to go through the scanning.
And those are elements actually that we carry from the different experience that we hold. So actually the brand is really a differentiator, but also what it then delivers, because that is what people remember.
And those are elements actually that we carry from the different experience that we hold. So actually the brand is really a differentiator, but also what it then delivers, because that is what people remember.
And those are elements actually that we carry from the different experience that we hold. So actually the brand is really a differentiator, but also what it then delivers, because that is what people remember.
Because that's, of course, where we originate from. Not always they will have all light bulbs. So I don't believe in a world of sole provisioning. That's also building a hook. Why? In the healthcare delivery, we build products that... are catered to an open ecosystem. We are unique, again, going back to informatics.
Because that's, of course, where we originate from. Not always they will have all light bulbs. So I don't believe in a world of sole provisioning. That's also building a hook. Why? In the healthcare delivery, we build products that... are catered to an open ecosystem. We are unique, again, going back to informatics.
Because that's, of course, where we originate from. Not always they will have all light bulbs. So I don't believe in a world of sole provisioning. That's also building a hook. Why? In the healthcare delivery, we build products that... are catered to an open ecosystem. We are unique, again, going back to informatics.
Many of the challenges in informatics, and especially for the users in dealing with informatics and informatics systems, come from the fact that they are closed systems or proprietary systems. And that means that if a hospital uses five different informatics systems, they need to jump from monitor to monitor. And actually, that's not seamless.
Many of the challenges in informatics, and especially for the users in dealing with informatics and informatics systems, come from the fact that they are closed systems or proprietary systems. And that means that if a hospital uses five different informatics systems, they need to jump from monitor to monitor. And actually, that's not seamless.
Many of the challenges in informatics, and especially for the users in dealing with informatics and informatics systems, come from the fact that they are closed systems or proprietary systems. And that means that if a hospital uses five different informatics systems, they need to jump from monitor to monitor. And actually, that's not seamless.
And actually, an environment that we want to provide, and we are truly leading in that, is we provide a multi-vendor experience, which means that we are open to orders to kind of hook up to our system so that the user, the nurse, or the doctor can look at one screen instead of looking at seven screens that are on their desk.
And actually, an environment that we want to provide, and we are truly leading in that, is we provide a multi-vendor experience, which means that we are open to orders to kind of hook up to our system so that the user, the nurse, or the doctor can look at one screen instead of looking at seven screens that are on their desk.
And actually, an environment that we want to provide, and we are truly leading in that, is we provide a multi-vendor experience, which means that we are open to orders to kind of hook up to our system so that the user, the nurse, or the doctor can look at one screen instead of looking at seven screens that are on their desk.
I go very regularly to hospitals and I must say it's really sometimes astonishing what the nurses, the doctors, technicians still have to deal with. In Germany, they still use faxes as a common communication method. In the US, in some hospitals, you will see that
I go very regularly to hospitals and I must say it's really sometimes astonishing what the nurses, the doctors, technicians still have to deal with. In Germany, they still use faxes as a common communication method. In the US, in some hospitals, you will see that
I go very regularly to hospitals and I must say it's really sometimes astonishing what the nurses, the doctors, technicians still have to deal with. In Germany, they still use faxes as a common communication method. In the US, in some hospitals, you will see that
In an imaging room, they have five different screens or in a monitoring ICU center, they look at a whole area of different kind of functionality they need to monitor. We need to help them actually to do their job in a simpler way because they want to spend their time not on five different systems.
In an imaging room, they have five different screens or in a monitoring ICU center, they look at a whole area of different kind of functionality they need to monitor. We need to help them actually to do their job in a simpler way because they want to spend their time not on five different systems.
In an imaging room, they have five different screens or in a monitoring ICU center, they look at a whole area of different kind of functionality they need to monitor. We need to help them actually to do their job in a simpler way because they want to spend their time not on five different systems.
They want to spend their time on caring for the patient, on doing the best intervention and actually making the best diagnosis. And therefore, when we think about what they experience and how we can help Thinking in an open manner, connecting the different systems, making it easy to work with is something that actually we really put a lot of focus on.