Crown Software, Inc.
If you are looking for software to help run and manage your pharmacy, then look no further.
Rx-Link is designed to handle all tasks in the hospital pharmacy that are repetitive.
If you have to do it more than once, it is likely that Rx-link will do it for you. Our software is currently in
use in hospitals up to 500 beds.
It will print IV labels, fill lists, and billing reports and will help you with many clinical functions and
reporting.
What makes us different:
Frequent Updates - we release (on average)
an update at least every week
Rx-Link is not expensive. (Click here for our pricing information, and for hardware requirements.)
Rx-Link is available single or multi-user - you can start single user and
move to multi-user easily
Rx-Link has an extensive features list
Rx-Link uses Facts
and Comparisons MediSpan data for drug interactions, allergy checking and patient drug education
Our latest update version of Rx-Link is version
8.61. It
was released on February, 2006 and is available on the technical
support web.
We send out a fax every Friday to all our clients regarding new features, bugs we have found
and ways to get around these "undocumented features". If you would like to receive one of our faxes,
please call us or fax us a note.
Supported Operating Systems
We run on the following operating systems:
For single user systems we use:
Windows XP
Pro
Windows 2000
For Networking (multi-user systems) we use:
NOVELL 3.11 or greater
NT 4.0 Service Pack 4 or
greater
Windows 2000
or 2003 Server
Hardware Requirements as of
Second Quarter 2006
Our cool/useful sites including drug information sites.
Technical Support Web Site -
Note that we have a newsletter that you can subscribe to. Please check the link
on the left hand side of our web site. Simply click on subscribe and then send
the email - as long as the word SUBSCRIBE is in the subject line you will be
added to the list. Unsubscribing is easy as well.
Copyright 2000-2008 Crown Software, Inc.
186 Lonely Oaks, Killeen, Texas 76542-9727
Last updated by Bill King, R.Ph. on
10/24/2008