HCHTech
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 4,220
- Location
- Pittsburgh, PA - USA
One of my very few medical clients (a chiropractic practice) called yesterday with the complaint that their practice management database was slow. This would be unusual since it runs on a 10-month old dedicated server with a 10Gb connection to the network switch, and all workstations are gigabit with SSDs. "Slow" is never one of the normal complaints from them. Finding absolutely nothing wrong after working with one of the frontdesk computers and server over their lunch hour, I chalked it up to a fluke and went on. It was working ok now (they agreed) so we left that they would call if it happened again.
So they call back today complaining that it has been slow again and that's when they mention that they just got a new Sonos system so they could play music in the individual patient rooms. They have 7 or 8 Play:1 speakers connected to the employee wireless (not the guest network), and each one was streaming a different Pandora channel.
So....first - I'll bet I know why the network was slower than it used to be, and second, I'm not sure there is a good fix. Lastly, I'm wondering how streaming services like this might impact their HIPAA compliance.
They have FIOS business service 90/90. I tested almost this exact speed from a workstation when I did my remote session yesterday, although no one was using the Sonos at that time.
I wonder how much bandwidth a Sonos stream of Pandora uses? I'd bet 128kb at least, but that x 8 is still only a bit over 1Mb and they have 90Mb service (although that doesn't account for latency). I wonder if I could tag the traffic and confine it to a carved out portion of their bandwidth, like you would do with VOIP traffic...
I don't think I can put the things on the guest network (without carving a path through the firewall) since they are controlled by controller software that lives on the workstations.
Suggestions?
So they call back today complaining that it has been slow again and that's when they mention that they just got a new Sonos system so they could play music in the individual patient rooms. They have 7 or 8 Play:1 speakers connected to the employee wireless (not the guest network), and each one was streaming a different Pandora channel.
So....first - I'll bet I know why the network was slower than it used to be, and second, I'm not sure there is a good fix. Lastly, I'm wondering how streaming services like this might impact their HIPAA compliance.
They have FIOS business service 90/90. I tested almost this exact speed from a workstation when I did my remote session yesterday, although no one was using the Sonos at that time.
I wonder how much bandwidth a Sonos stream of Pandora uses? I'd bet 128kb at least, but that x 8 is still only a bit over 1Mb and they have 90Mb service (although that doesn't account for latency). I wonder if I could tag the traffic and confine it to a carved out portion of their bandwidth, like you would do with VOIP traffic...
I don't think I can put the things on the guest network (without carving a path through the firewall) since they are controlled by controller software that lives on the workstations.
Suggestions?