Archive for February 26th, 2007

Posted on Feb 26th, 2007

At the end of 20th century we were seeing numerous publications on Oracle Financials international implementations, customizations and integrations. Then in 2000 Java platform showed up on the MRP scene and Oracle begun the move toward J2EE, EJB platform, together with Sun Microsystems and IBM. Currently we see software vendors consolidation – Microsoft acquired Navision (Attain & Axapta) and Great Plains Software (eEnterprise, Dynamics and Solomon), IBM is the owner of Lotus (Domino), Then SAP is now the owner of SAP Business One, which is the preferred solution for small businesses (however small is not actually that small – 10 to several hundred employees). OK, let’s stop philosophical excurse and concentrate on SAP Business One localized Brazilian Portuguese version.

• Named User Licenses Schema. SAP Business One set of modules, including CRM, Production/MRP, Sales, Purchasing, Inventory modules are available at the fixed price per named user. You can also have CRM only user licenses ( price at the 50% of the full named user license price)

• CRM Module. This is one of the most recently designed CRM solutions, where you can apply your intuition to analyze Client Relation Management pipeline, funnel, or simply click your mouse in order to understand your business sales process intuitively.

• Drag and Relate. This is the feature of SAP Business One. You can quickly get the analytical diagram by dragging (and relating)

• São Paulo Manufacturing. Sao Paulo, being the largest megapolis in South America reserves its market niche as manufacturing and services center. This is why we consider ERP/Production/Manufacturing module of SAP Business One as cucial.

• Rio de Janeiro. Rio is the second megapolis in Brazil and we expect substantial influence of Rio ERP market on the SAP BO fate in Brazil. Rio is primarily the distribution place for the whole South America with its Atlantic port.

Please give as a call São Paulo 55-11-3826-3449, USA 1-866-528-0577, 1-630-961-5918! help@albaspectrum.com

Andrew is Great Plains specialist in Alba Spectrum Technologies (http://www.albaspectrum.com) – Oracle, SAP, Microsoft Great Plains, Navision, Axapta, Microsoft CRM Partner, serving clients in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Salvador, Porto Alegre, Curitiba, Belo Horizonte, Recife, Manaus, Lisboa, Coimbra, Porto, Cascais and having locations in multiple states and internationally

Posted on Feb 26th, 2007

RSS (Really Simple Syndication) is a way for a site to publish it’s updates. RSS readers can read these notifications and display a listing of the updates to you, the user.

It’s sort of like having a special ‘inbox’ for emails announcing updates to your selected websites.

Many applications and websites support RSS feeds. You can add RSS feeds to your My Yahoo! page, Firefox has several RSS extensions such as Sage, there are sites that deal w/ RSS feeds such as Feedster and FastBuzz. Thunderbird even allows you to set up RSS feeds similar to your inbox.

There are also stand alone applications for RSS feeds like Pluck, RSSReader and SharpReader.

Different readers allow you to subscribe to a feed differently. Using Firefox w/ Sage, for example, you can drag-and-drop the RSS icon into your RSS feed folder and it’s done.

What’s the benefit?

You can use RSS feeds to see if there’s anything new at a given site before visiting the site. This wouldn’t be a big help if you only had one RSS feed. However, if you have several sites you check routinely, this can cut the time down tremendously.

It gives you more of an ‘at-a-glance’ view of all your monitored sites. Imagine if when you went to click on your bookmark for a site that it also said right then if the site had changed and how.

Also, depending on the RSS reader you use, it can tell you when you have a new update on the site.

Sites with RSS Feeds

There are many sites w/ RSS feeds. To know if a site has an RSS feed, look for an "RSS" link on the site or a button/icon w/ RSS, ATOM or XML on it.

One cool use is to set the RSS feed for a news search on a site. At Yahoo! News you can search on a topic in the news and then subscribe to that feed using the XML icon.

A lot of news/info/blog sites have RSS feeds that can help you keep up to date on the info you want.

It’s a collection of tech info that’s updated regularly. You can see if/when it’s been updated in your reader, see the title of the updates and a short summary and then decide if you want to load the site or that post or nothing.

Bottom Line

RSS readers allow you to see the latest updates to sites (and possibly be notified) at-a-glance without having to go to all your sites and load them. It’s like peaking into many sites from a single place.

Bear Cahill is a software engineer in the Dallas, TX area and runs a few websites including: The Armchair Geek (thearmchairgeek.com), http://www.webpagehostinginfo.com, http://www.gotocollegeonline.com and http://www.videoexchange.org

Publish freely if this resource box is included and links maintained as links.