Some .NET-enabled Examples
The Microsoft .NET environment includes what a business might need to develop and deploy a Web service-connected information technology (IT) architecture: smart clients, servers to host Web services, development tools to create them, applications to use them, and a worldwide network of more than 35,000 Microsoft Certified Partner organizations to provide any help users might need.
Part Two of the series Subtle (or Not-so-subtle) Nuances of Microsoft .NET Enablement.
Most vendors have naturally chosen to evolve their existing application framework to meet the market needs detailed in Subtle (or Not-so-subtle) Nuances of Microsoft .NET Enablement. For a general discussion of the evolution of system architecture, see Architecture Evolution: Service-oriented Architecture versus Web Services.
When a compelling new technology does appear, it is quite common in the industry for an enterprise application provider to surround its old enterprise resource planning (ERP) or accounting core software in a "wrapper" of newer technology. The purpose of this is to effectively obfuscate the old technology, giving it the latest graphical look, or providing an easier means to access the core business logic and data from other, more modern systems and devices, or the Internet. Many ERP and accounting back-office systems in the market today were originally written in—and still contain—cores written in non-mainstream, or even antiquated technologies. Strategies employed to wrap older products include putting contemporary Windows graphical user interfaces (GUIs) (often referred to as "screen scrapers") or web browser-based user interfaces (UIs) on them. Lately, strategies have included providing new Web services layers to rejuvenate aged products by accessing the old business logic components and databases.
Evolving means a slower process where incremental changes are made to the existing architecture so that it eventually meets these demands. There are some good examples of .NET-enabled legacy software systems to which wrappers have been added to allow legacy functionality to be used and extended through Web services on the .NET Framework. In other words, at this more advanced level of .NET readiness, the legacy software system has a wrapper added which is a communication component created by an additional layer of code in the product. The wrapper is written in one of the .NET Framework languages, and by adding this wrapper, the legacy system functionality can be used through Web services. Other great advantages of this approach is that such systems run on the accepted current market definition of the .NET Framework, and allow fairly rapid enablement of legacy functionality.
One application that fits into the wrappering side of things is the Epicor Enterprise client/server product suite, whose business logic is exposed via .NET Web services. Most Epicor products generate Web services from business logic, or have business logic that simply is Web services (since the vendor has some heritage manufacturing products that will remain in traditional client/server mode). It is also interesting to note that there are no Web services in many of the Microsoft Dynamics ERP products as of yet. This is primarily because in some products, nothing is coded in (or requires) .NET for now, at least not in the core product (see Microsoft Keeps on Rounding up Its Business Solutions). Certainly, developers have an application program interface (API) to code in .NET around them or to extend them, but the core product is still largely Common Object Model (COM)-based. Even Epicor Enterprise might be in "better shape," since Epicor provides .NET-enablement via .NET extensible markup language (XML) Web service code wrappers.
SYSPRO
A great example of a more advanced approach is that of SYSPRO. It goes beyond using wrappers, and aims to componentize the product so that its functionality can be used on any device or with any modern development language (including .NET languages). SYSPRO is a well-known developer of enterprise software for mid-market manufacturers and distributors (with about 12,000 licensed companies in more than 60 countries worldwide), and was one of the first software vendors to embrace the Microsoft .NET technology (see SYSPRO—Awaiting Positive IMPACT From Its Brand Unification). SYSPRO spent years developing its .NET Framework-based solution during the same time period of Microsoft's efforts to launch the .NET Framework technology commercially. Many of the building blocks of the SYSPRO solution were built initially on the beta releases of the commercially available Microsoft software. The company saw the .NET Framework as a way to add functionality and extend controls along the entire supply chain control, without the need for extensive programming or alterations to the core system.
SYSPRO introduced SYSPRO e.net solutions to expose the extensive SYSPRO functionality as business objects that can be used on any device or with any modern development language. This "componentization" was written from the ground up, to work seamlessly with XML, and .NET or COM environments. The SYSPRO business objects or components are "building blocks" that allow customers and developers to build Web services for customized solutions, or for seamless integration into third party products relatively quickly and easily. The business objects ensure that business logic, SYSPRO security, and data integrity are retained.
SYSPRO e.net solutions also form the foundation of the rewritten SYSPRO web applications that were developed using .NET technology and the SYSPRO business objects. The SYSPRO e.net solutions Web services, which form part of the web applications, deliver the core SYSPRO functionality to almost any client device across a variety of protocols in an integrated and cohesive manner. This enables applications and services that should provide manufacturers and distributors with new levels of functionality and flexibility.
A good example of the use of SYSPRO e.net solutions is the SYSPRO CyberStore offering, which is an e-commerce application that extends the concept of service-oriented architecture (SOA) to business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) trading. SYSPRO CyberStore offers online shopping 24x7 with near real-time inventory information and real-time pricing, and places the order directly into the SYSPRO ERP system using SYSPRO business objects and XML standards. For example, as a user navigates through the e-commerce site, different SYSPRO e-net solutions objects and services will be invoked to retrieve the relevant information. As a product is selected by a buyer, the inventory look-up business object is invoked to perform an online inventory check and fetch the latest image of the product from the back-end SYSPRO ERP system. The information is returned and rendered to the user, with the result being live inventory information provided to a potential e-commerce buyer. In addition, if the refresh button is selected a split second after a sales order is entered by the accounts department in the back-end ERP system, the revised inventory information will be displayed to the user on the e-commerce site. If the user purchases the item, the information relevant to the buyer and the payment method will be collected in the front-end e-commerce system, passed to a business object using the XML standard, and automatically processed in real time into the back-end SYSPRO ERP system.
SYSPRO e.net solutions provide a fairly cost-effective way for SYSPRO customers to integrate other best-of-breed applications, maximize B2B e-commerce trading, and leverage wireless connectivity, without compromising the business rules and security inherent in SYSPRO software. The XML standard and collaborative commerce tools like the Microsoft BizTalk Server and SYSPRO e.net solutions Document Flow Manager (DFM) enable systems to be more extensible and to collaborate with any other disparate or legacy system. As a result of the effective use of the .NET Framework, objects and services, and XML, independent systems can be set up to collaborate in real time despite their disparities.
In order to make the technology viable in the mid-market, SYSPRO embedded the aforementioned collaborative commerce engine into the core SYSPRO ERP software. The DFM automatically consumes and transmits XML transactions in real time by continually checking predetermined folders or e-mail addresses on a Microsoft Exchange Server for XML transactions. The XML transaction files are either e-mailed or transmitted via file transfer protocol (FTP). As the SYSPRO predefined XML transaction is identified by the DFM, it is automatically consumed by the module, which will in turn invoke a business object (business logic) to process the received transaction. The DFM module can also be configured to transmit the reply from the business object to an e-mail address or to another business object for further processing.
In environments where it may not be feasible to transact in real time directly through a Web service, the DFM module can be used to asynchronously process the transaction. The payment authorization can be processed in the front-end e-commerce system, and the relevant information placed in an XML file, which would then be transmitted back to the DFM and consumed using the same business object as if it were being processed using the Web service. In a situation where the back-end SYSPRO ERP system is offline for some reason, transactions are queued for processing by the DFM, and the module can initiate replies and transmit XML transactions back to the e-commerce system, and initiate e-mails or other proactive processes to increase efficiencies and the customer experience.
SYSPRO Expands Strategy
SYSPRO continues to expand its .NET Framework strategy with its latest product release, SYSPRO Version 6.0 Issue 010. The brand new SYSPRO Reporting Services (SRS) suite is written using .NET technology, and uses the business objects to render the reports seamlessly to an embedded Crystal Reports XI Server. SRS offers additional functionality such as archiving, scheduling, report customization, and various output methods. Issue 010 also sees the release of a new SYSPRO Analytics module (totally rewritten in .NET) which provides a solution for analyzing and dissecting data, enabling businesses to track trends, recognize and adapt to changes, and make informed decisions.
SYSPRO delivers information to users with a sophisticated analytics tool that is fairly easy to use, and does not require the technical knowledge of an online analytical processing (OLAP) developer. The new UI in Issue 010 has also been rewritten using cutting-edge GUI components, offering SYSPRO users easy personalization of their own screens, as well as easy customization enabling the use of Web services with VBScript associated with an unlimited number of user-defined fields. The customization can be deployed on a central or distributed basis. Electronic Signatures, also released in Issue 010, enables much more than just operator authentication when transactions are processed. The flexible design enables processes to be triggered based on user-defined criteria, facilitating enhanced business process controls that link to third party or custom programs, or to Web services with VBScript.
SYSPRO e.net solutions continue to provide a solid foundation that enables businesses to build or develop a service-oriented architecture (SOA). SOA concepts can simplify the reengineering of business processes, and provide a solid and obvious foundation for companies to respond more quickly to change. Business benefits from SOA should also include improved time-to-market, more responsive customer service, and increased visibility in the face of changing regulations, such as the US Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) (see Using Business Intelligence Infrastructure to Ensure Compliancy with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act) and US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requirements.
Epicor Software Corporation
Epicor Software Corporation, also a prominent mid-market provider of industry-specific enterprise software solutions, is an example of a vendor that used Microsoft .NET technology to rebuild its application from the ground up as an SOA too. Epicor delivered its next-generation SOA-based manufacturing solutions, Vantage 8.0 and Vista 8.0, at the end of 2004. The solutions continue to be adopted by progressive midsized manufacturers, with the re-architected Vantage and Vista solutions having reportedly been shipped to more than 1,000 new and existing Epicor customers. Epicor Vantage is a comprehensive solution designed to meet the needs of make-to-order (MTO) and mixed-mode manufacturing companies, while Epicor Vista is an integrated manufacturing and accounting solution for emerging manufacturers, job shops, or MTO departments of large enterprises. Designed to meet the needs of both small and medium manufacturers, the solutions include built-in workflows managing the entire order cycle, from marketing and sales, through production and planning, sourcing and procurement, installation and service, and financial recognition. Early in 2002, Epicor embarked on a major effort to rebuild the two products using Microsoft .NET and the Progress OpenEdge fourth-generation language (4GL) development environment, which has meanwhile become.NET Framework compliant (for more information, see Epicor Reaches Better Vista From This Vantage Point). Both Vantage and Vista are available on Microsoft SQL Server and Progress databases, giving customers the freedom and flexibility to choose whichever makes sense for their business.
As a result of a major effort over a few years (about one year to develop the SOA tool set, and the rest to port the code), the new object-oriented SOA-based ERP systems were announced in late 2004. Featuring an n-tier architecture built with Microsoft .NET and Web services technology, both Vista 8.0 and Vantage 8.0 are architected from the ground up to support SOA, which should enable user businesses to leverage software services and components through open industry standards. In turn, this should simplify application-to-application (A2A) integration and supply chain connectivity. The new architecture exposes all functionality as Web services, which should make it easier to orchestrate business processes and workflows within the application in order to promote lean principles and continuous performance initiatives. It also promises new levels of application reliability, scalability, system interoperability, and flexibility, combined with a rich and personalized user experience.
Today, nearly 500 business objects across 30 modules (featuring thousands of business functions) are exposed as business services, meaning that customers should be able to extend the applications and develop integrations to other products. To that end, given the somewhat heterogeneous portfolio of Epicor products, the vendor announced Epicor Service Connect (released in fall 2005), a Web services-based business integration platform. This platform functions as the central integration point for implementing secure workflow orchestrations within Epicor applications and with third party applications to enhance collaboration and automate business processes. Harnessing the openness of XML Web services, Service Connect uses industry-wide standards and technology enabling businesses to deploy solutions now, with a degree of confidence that their investment will remain intact in the future. The SOA of many Epicor solutions enables Service Connect to transform or combine application processes to streamline processing within the application framework, whereby business components, represented as Web services outside of the application, can easily be accessed within Service Connect to eliminate non-value added steps and streamline basically any business process.
Designed to support both internal and external connectivity to Epicor solutions as well as to external applications or processes, Service Connect provides a straightforward solution for graphically mapping process flows and orchestrating transactions. To that end, the tool uses visual workflows to map data to different formats, and create and assign tasks for human interaction, and uses "drag and drop" processes to call Web services, enabling non-programmers to build their own scenarios that interoperate with the application. For example, processing sales orders typically involves multiple steps including numerous availability inquiries, reviews, and inventory release decisions, all serving to extend order lead times. Service Connect enables users to eliminate many of these steps by creating orchestrations for routing processes to automated tasks, such as order-submit direct-to-pick for specific inventory items, or priority order fulfillment for a company's best customers, in turn improving order-to-delivery performance. By enabling non-programmer solution users to automate tasks and processes within the application, Service Connect also helps to promote lean principles, continuous performance initiatives, and Six Sigma quality, by providing a simple workflow orchestration tool to improve collaboration, velocity of information, and ultimately value chain performance.
Some Epicor customers already leverage Service Connect to provide the interface between their Web site store fronts and Epicor Vantage. Service Connect verifies that orders from the Web site store front are downloaded to Vantage, validated, and rapidly acknowledged back to the Web site store front in near-real time. The tool can also coordinate exception handling, shipment notifications, and verification of inventory availability levels. Epicor Service Connect is available as a standard component of Epicor Vantage, Epicor iScala, Epicor Enterprise, and Epicor Clientele solutions. Soon, Epicor plans to start offering Vantage 8.0 pre-configured workflow processes targeted to specific functions and industries. Together, these tools should enable manufacturers to leverage Vantage to configure, for example, the customer order cycle from marketing through planning and production, procurement, and finance, thereby fine-tuning specific functions as required using the Service Connect tool.
Other Examples
Other noteworthy examples of .NET-enablement include Infor SyteLine (formerly part of Frontstep and MAPICS—see Frontstep Ups The .NET Ante), the Exact Macola ES, e-Synergy and Globe products (see A Single Software Solution That Enables Business Process Management), and some of the Microsoft Dynamics products. As a result of this more evolutionary approach, customers should be able to modify, enhance, and adapt individual Web services without changing other software components, thus mitigating the need for the huge technology platform shifts and upgrades of the past disruptive technology advents. This should, in principle, allow companies to protect existing investments and add new functionality that can be reasonably easily designed, built, deployed, accessed and combined with existing Web services and syndicated across division, company, and geographic boundaries.
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Part Four: SOA and Web Services | Oracle Further Orchestrates Its SOA Forays
Part Three: Strategy Shifts | Oracle Further Orchestrates Its SOA Forays
Part Two: Strategy | Oracle Further Orchestrates Its SOA Forays
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Part Five: 3PL Support and SCE Optimization | Provia Tackles RFID in a Twofold Manner
Part Four: Global Availability | Provia Tackles RFID in a Twofold Manner
Part Three: Provia and Viastore Systems Alignment | Provia Tackles RFID in a Twofold Manner
Part Two: RFID Compliance | Provia Tackles RFID in a Twofold Manner
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Part Two: Challenges and Lessons Learned | RFID Case Study: Gillette and Provia
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Part Two: Challenges and User Recommendations | Microsoft Keeps on Rounding up Its Business Solutions
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Part Five: Challenges and User Recommendations | Lawson Software-IPO and Several Acquisitions After
Part Four: Strengths Continued | Lawson Software-IPO and Several Acquisitions After
Part Three: Market Impact | Lawson Software-IPO and Several Acquisitions After
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Part Four: Challenges, and User Recommendations | SSA GT to EXE-cute (Yet) Another Acquisition
Part Three: Impact on SSA GT | SSA GT to EXE-cute (Yet) Another Acquisition
Part Two: EXE | SSA GT To EXE-cute (Yet) Another Acquisition | QAD Pulling through, Patiently but Passionately
Part Six: User Recommendations | QAD Pulling Through, Patiently But Passionately
Part Five: Challenges | QAD Pulling Through, Patiently But Passionately
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Part Three: Product Differentiators | Solomon Stands the Test of Time Despite Changing Masters
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Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | Scala and Microsoft Become (Not So) Strange CRM Bedfellows
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Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | Epicor Conducts Its Own ROI Acquisition Rationale
Part Two: Market Impact | Epicor Conducts Its Own ROI Acquisition Rationale | Lose the Starry Eyes, Analyze: Reviewing the Ideal Candidate for EMR Innovations ProcessPro | RTI's CRM Applications Rivals The Major League Providers | IBM Express-es Its Candid Desire For SMEs
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | IBM Express-es Its Candid Desire For SMEs
Part Two: Market Impact | IBM Express-es Its Candid Desire For SMEs | Best Software Delivers More Insights To Its Partners
(As Well As To The Market)
Part Five: Challenges and User Recommendations | Best Software Delivers More Insights To Its Partners
(As Well As To The Market)
Part Four: Market Impact Continued | Best Software Delivers More Insights To Its Partners (As Well As To The Market)
Part Three: Market Impact | Best Software Delivers More Insights To Its Partners (As Well As To The Market)
Part Two: Event Summary Continued | Best Software Delivers More Insights To Its Partners
(As Well As To The Market) | Baan And SSA GT Merge To Form A Mid-Market Empire With An ''Iron Side''
Part Four: Market Impact Summary and User Recommendations | Baan And SSA GT Merge To Form A Mid-Market Empire With An ''Iron Side''
Part Three: Market Impact On SSA GT | Baan And SSA GT Merge To Form A Mid-Market Empire With An ''Iron Side''
Part Two: Market Impact On Baan | Baan And SSA GT Merge To Form A Mid-Market Empire With An ''Iron Side'' | To Gain Market Share in the Mid-Market, SAP Leaves No Stone Unturned | Welcome to the CRM Mid-Market Abyss-PeopleSoft | Frantic Merger-Mania Spiced Up With Vendettas Leaves Customers Anxious | Lose the Starry Eyes, Analyze: Reviewing the Ideal Candidate for Metasystems ICIM | Epicor Reaches Better Vista From This Vantage Point
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | Epicor Reaches Better Vista From This Vantage Point
Part Two: Market Impact | Epicor Reaches Better Vista From This Vantage Point | A User Centric WorkWise Customer Conference | ROI Systems Defies The Odds Through Delighted Customers
Part Three: Strengths, Challenges and User Recommendations | ROI Systems Defies The Odds Through Delighted Customers
Part Two: Market Impact | ROI Systems Defies The Odds Through Delighted Customers | Adonix + CIMPRO = A Feature-Rich Process ERP Product, But With Challenges | SCE Leaders Partner To See Beyond Their Portfolio
Part Two: Market Impact | Baan Seeking A New Foster Home -- A Déjà vu Or Not Quite?
Part Three: Market Impact and User Recommendations | Baan Seeking A New Foster Home -- A Déjà vu Or Not Quite?
Part Two: Baan Under Invensys | Baan Seeking A New Foster Home -- A Déjà vu Or Not Quite? | Microsoft Convergence 2003 portrayed an Enterprise Solutions crossroad! | Commerce One Conducts Its Soul-Searching Metamorphosis
Part Two: Challenges and User Recommendations | Commerce One Conducts Its Soul-Searching Metamorphosis | Cincom Acknowledges There Is A Composite Applications Environ-ment Out There
Part Two: Challenges and User Recommendations | Cincom Acknowledges There Is A Composite Applications Environ-ment Out There | Lose the Starry Eyes, Analyze: Reviewing the Ideal Candidate for a Pronto Solution | Is J.D. Edwards's CRM 2.0 (With more than 200 Enhancements) Good News? | Ramco Ships Technology And Products.
Part Two: User and Vendor Recommendations | Ramco Ships Technology And Products.
Is This The Future Of Enterprise Applications? | SYSPRO - Awaiting Positive IMPACT From Its Brand Unification
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | SYSPRO - Awaiting Positive IMPACT From Its Brand Unification
Part Two: Market Impact | SYSPRO - Awaiting Positive IMPACT From Its Brand Unification | SAP Weaves Microsoft .NET And IBM WebSphere Into Its ESA Tapestry
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | SAP Weaves Microsoft .NET And IBM WebSphere Into Its ESA Tapestry
Part Two: Market Impact | SAP Weaves Microsoft .NET And IBM WebSphere Into Its ESA Tapestry | Lilly Software - Product Enhancements Remain Its Order 'Du Jour'
Part Four: Challenges and User Recommendations | Lilly Software - Product Enhancements Remain Its Order 'Du Jour'
Part Three: Competitive Analysis | Lilly Software - Product Enhancements Remain Its Order 'Du Jour'
Part Two: Market Impact | Lilly Software - Product Enhancements Remain Its Order 'Du Jour' | Will Adonix Provide A Warmer Home To CIMPRO?
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | Will Adonix Provide A Warmer Home To CIMPRO?
Part Two: Market Impact | Will Adonix Provide A Warmer Home To CIMPRO? | ACCPAC -- Being Much More Than Meets The Eye
Part Four: Challenges and User Recommendations | ACCPAC -- Being Much More Than Meets The Eye
Part Three: Market Impact | ACCPAC -- Being Much More Than Meets The Eye
Part Two: Announcements Continued | ACCPAC -- Being Much More Than Meets The Eye | Ramco Systems' Users - Winning Big And Speaking Out In Las Vegas | Made2Manage Affirms Its Technological Astuteness
Part 3: Challenges and User Recommendations | Made2Manage Affirms Its Technological Astuteness
Part 2: Strategy | Made2Manage Affirms Its Technological Astuteness | MAPICS To Leap Forward In A Frontstep Way
Part 3: Challenges and User Recommendations | MAPICS To Leap Forward In A Frontstep Way
Part 2: Market Impact | MAPICS To Leap Forward In A Frontstep Way | Best Software To Hold Competition At Bay
Part Four: Challenges & User Recommendations | Best Software To Hold Competition At Bay
Part Three: Market Impact | Best Software To Hold Competition At Bay
Part Two: Strategy | Best Software To Hold Competition At Bay | Ross Systems Shows Poise in 'Big Easy' | Is SSA GT Betting Infini(um)tely On Acquisitions?
Part Four: Challenges and User Recommendations. | Is SSA GT Betting Infini(um)tely On Acquisitions?
Part Three: Complementary Products | Is SSA GT Betting Infini(um)tely On Acquisitions?
Part Two: Market Impact | Is SSA GT Betting Infini(um)tely On Acquisitions? | Epicor Picks Clarus' Bargain At The Software Flea Market
Part 2: Challenges and User Recommendations | Epicor Picks Clarus' Bargain At The Software Flea Market | Cincom Asserts Expertise In CRM For Complex Manufacturers
Part 2: Challenges and User Recommendations | Cincom Asserts Expertise In CRM For Complex Manufacturers | MAPICS Moving On Pragmatically
Part 4: Competition and User Recommendations | MAPICS Moving On Pragmatically
Part 3: Challenges | MAPICS Moving On Pragmatically
Part 2: Market Impact | MAPICS Moving On Pragmatically | Microsoft Lays Enforced-Concrete Foundation For Its Business Solutions
Part 4: User Recommendations | Microsoft Lays Enforced-Concrete Foundation For Its Business Solutions
Part 3: Challenges | Microsoft Lays Enforced-Concrete Foundation For Its Business Solutions
Part 2: Market Impact | Microsoft Lays Enforced-Concrete Foundation For Its Business Solutions | J.D. Edwards Finds Its Inner-Self Within Its 5th Incarnation
Part 4: Challenges and User Recommendations | J.D. Edwards Finds Its Inner-Self Within Its 5th Incarnation
Part 3: Market Impact | J.D. Edwards Finds Its Inner-Self Within Its 5th Incarnation
Part 2: FOCUS Announcements Continued | J.D. Edwards Finds Its Inner-Self Within Its 5th Incarnation | PeopleSoft Internationalizes Its Mid-Market Forays
Part 2: Challenges & User Recommendations | PeopleSoft Internationalizes Its Mid-Market Forays | Frontstep Ups The .NET Ante
Part 2: Challenges and User Recommendations | Frontstep Ups The .NET Ante | Will Glovia Glow Again Through Its Hub And VARs?
Part 2: Challenges and User Recommendations | Will Glovia Glow Again Through Its Hub And VARs? | Lose the Starry-Eyes, Analyze:An Ideal Customer for Relevant INFIMACS | Ramco Systems - Diversity Marshaled Through Flexibility
Part 3: Challenges and User Recommendations | SAP Farms More Business Out Amid Its Staff Reductions | Ramco Systems - Diversity Marshaled Through Flexibility
Part 2: Market Impact | Ramco Systems - Diversity Marshaled Through Flexibility | SAP Opens The ‘Miss Congeniality’ Contest | Lilly Software Visualizes Its eBusiness Offering, NOW. Part 2: Market Impact | PeopleSoft Remains Rock-Hard And Economy Proof | Lilly Software Visualizes Its eBusiness Offering, NOW | Glovia On B2B Reinventing Trail | Kewill And Microsoft Great Plains To Further Mutually Complement | Syspro Hatches 'Encore' IMPACT On SME Manufacturers. Part 2: Market Impact | INFIMACS Becoming Ever More RELEVANT For Project-Based Industries. Part 2: Market Impact and User Recommendations | INFIMACS Becoming Ever More RELEVANT For Project-Based Industries. Part 1: Recent Developments | Clarity of Vision: Clarify Sold to Amdocs by Nortel | Collaborative Commerce: ERP, CRM, e-Proc, and SCM Unite! A Series Study: IFS - Part 2 of 2 | Way To Go, Ross Systems! | Collaborative Commerce: ERP, CRM, e-Proc, and SCM Unite! A Series Study: IFS - Part 1 of 2 | MAPICS Unifies The Brand And Interacts For CRM Solutions | IFS Glows Amidst The Mid-Market Gloom | Oracle Makes A U-Turn At The 'All Things To All People' Exit | 'Collaborative Commerce': ERP, CRM, e-Proc, and SCM Unite! A Series Study: SAP AG | 'Collaborative Commerce': ERP, CRM, e-Proc, and SCM Unite! A Series Study: Baan and Parent Company, Invensys | Frontstep Still Awaiting Better Times | Will V8 Help SSA GT Regain Lost Ground? | PeopleSoft Keeps Truckin’ On A Potholed Road Ahead | Epicor Shows Resilience When It Needs It The Most | J.D. Edwards Fires Siebel, Hires YOU | SAP Thrives On Competitors' Plight, In Part | Made2Manage Manages Throughout Soft Market | Microsoft Great Plains Procures eProcure At Last | SAP - A Humble Giant From The Reality Land?
Part 5: Challenges and User Recommendations | SAP - A Humble Giant From The Reality Land?
Part 4: SAP's Strategy | i2, SAP, Oracle Poised For Showdown in Q4 | SAP – A Humble Giant From The Reality Land?
Part 3: Market Impact | SAP - A Humble Giant From The Reality Land?
Part 2: Expanding Functionality | SAP - A Humble Giant From The Reality Land?
Part 1: Alliances | PeopleSoft Supply Chain Is Music To Mid Market Ears | It Is Possible - SAP And Baan Strange Bedfellows | Oracle Claims The Worst Is Over And Turns To KISS For A Boost
Part 3: The Challenge of Gaining Competitive Advantage | Oracle Claims The Worst Is Over And Turns To KISS For A Boost
Part 2: The Implications | Oracle Claims The Worst Is Over And Turns To KISS For A Boost
Part 1: The News | Baan Achieves A Speedy Recovery Despite The Tough Times | Will QAD Finally Get The Break (-Even)? | ROI Systems - A Little ERP Fellow That Gets By | PeopleSoft - Catching Its Second Wind From The Internet
Part 3: Predictions and Recommendations | PeopleSoft - Catching Its Second Wind From The Internet
Part 2: Strengths and Challenges | PeopleSoft - Catching Its Second Wind From The Internet
Part 1: About PeopleSoft | Epicor To Try The Divestiture Tack, Too | MAPICS Clings To Its Customers' Loyalty | SAP Remains One Of The Market’s Beacons Of Hope | SSA Acquires MAX Hoping To Leap From Its MIN | IBM Buys What’s Left of Informix | Invensys Announces New Division - Baan Process | SAP Acquires TopTier To Further Broaden Its Horizons | Oracle Sails Slower In The Low Tide, But Mayday Signal Is Quite Far-Fetched | IFS Aspires To Capture North American Market Against The Low Tide | Is Intentia Truly Industry’s First In Food Traceability? | QAD Finally Breaks The Red Ink Streak, But… | Epicor Software Corp.: Completing Painstaking "e"Volution Part 2: Evaluating Epicor | J.D. Edwards Saved By SCM, Narrowly, And Only For Now | Epicor Software Corp.: Completing Painstaking "e"Volution Part 1: About Epicor | Infinium Attempts To Better Gain Some Markets' Ear | MAPICS XA Expands BI Offering Through Partnership With Vanguard | Has Intentia Turned The Corner? Almost. | Ross Systems Closes Ranks For A (Possible) Turnaround | PeopleSoft Plays Hardball | Is Made2Manage Made2Survive? Seems So. | Frontstep (Nee Symix Systems) A Step Closer To A Turnaround | SAP Defies Economic Slowdown, For Now | Can Lilly Software Get More VISUAL? | Fourth Shift Hopes To Thrive On China’s Greener Pastures | PeopleSoft Joins The Hunt For SMEs | Extricity Makes a Move into IBM’s Sphere of B2B Influence | Microsoft And Great Plains – A Friendship That Turned Into A Marriage | Oracle Sails Despite Market’s Low Tide; How Far Will It Go? | J.D. Edwards Reaches $1B Milestone In Another Losing Year | e-Catalysts Delivers Digital Marketplace | Made2Manage Systems, Inc.: M2M From A2Z For SMEs? | Ross Systems Continues To Slip, But Pledges to Fight Tooth And Claw | IFS Has A Magic Growth Formula; But What About Profitability? | SAP Claims Big Gains In The Low-End Battleground | IBI + IBM = EAI | Baan – What Will The Future In Invensys’ Stable Bring? Part 2: Evaluating Baan | Infinium Ends Its Most Challenging Year | JuxtaComm And IBM Integrate Their Integration Products | Great Plains Unveils New E-Commerce Solution | Great Plains Taps The Web To Deliver Product Support | Epicor Delivers On Milestones, But Its Situation Remains Bleak | Onyx Software: CRM Vendor Battling For Viability | Baan – What Will The Future In Invensys’ Stable Bring? Part 1: About Baan | Intentia Possibly Seeing Daylight | SAP Q3 Results Cause Mixed Reactions | Fourth Shift Tightens Belt To Weather The Drought | PeopleSoft Delivers Oxymoron In 'Supply Chain in a Box' | PeopleSoft – Again A Force To Be Reckoned With? | Another Type Of Virus Hits The World (And Gets Microsoft No Less) | J.D. Edwards – A Collaboration Thought Leader Or A Disguised ERP Follower? Part 2: Evaluating J.D. Edwards | J.D. Edwards – A Collaboration Thought Leader Or A Disguised ERP Follower? Part 1: About J.D. Edwards | ROI Systems Catching Up With e-Commerce | IBM Aims Renamed UNIX Server at Sun | Catalyst International to Tread Water With SAP Through 2000 | More Vendors Bail on Oracle in Favor of IBM | Great Plains Supply Chain Series To Be Powered By Logility | Infinium and Elcom Walk Down ASP Aisle | SAP Details CRM Plans | J.D. Edwards Closes Out Millennium on an Up Note | Oracle is Word One at Ford | Intentia Floats Vaporware Agent to Replace Business Planning | IBM Announces Netfinity 4000R Super-Thin Server | SAP AG - ERP Leader with a "New Dimension" | Baan Company N.V. - Is the Worst Over? | PeopleSoft on Client/Server and Database Issues | PeopleSoft - Are Business Intelligence and e-Commerce Enough? |