1. |
Compare MICROSOFT NAVISION side-by-side with BAAN, SAP, J.D. EDWARDS, EPICOR, ORACLE, QAD, and 35+ other ERP vendors

Nov 23, 2009
Today's usage of Decision Support Systems (DSS), combined with vetted ERP knowledge bases, allows organizations to save time and money, achieving better and more reliable/fully-documented decisions, a quantum improvement over the widely-used subjective process of selecting complex enterprise software...
|
| 2. |
EDI and XML Integration: Vitria Buys XMLSolutions (3 Pages)
by M. Reed
Apr 19, 2001 Abstract : In a move designed to further its efforts in integrating EDI and XML, Vitria has announced the purchase of XMLSolutions Corporation. Given that the market for EDI business collaboration is huge, and that XML is the up and coming (and lower cost) standard, we expect the ability to translate bi-directionally between either format will become hugely popular.
Type: Article
|
| 3. |
The Pain and Gain Of Integrated EDI Part One: The Pain of Integrated EDI (4 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Mar 21, 2005 Abstract : The real action is in merging the influx of electronically transmitted data with existing information already being processed within the ERP system, and the ensuing challenge is to make sense of this constant flood of information arriving daily in the form of EDI or XML messages.
Type: Article
|
| 4. |
EDI versus. XML--Working in Tandem Rather Than Competing? (3 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Mar 5, 2004 Abstract : Electronic data interchange (EDI), extensible markup language (XML) , and any other format are merely 'semantics' and input streams for expressing data, and whether a transaction is transmitted in EDI format or XML is largely secondary to the fact that electronic document and data exchange is growing rapidly.
Type: Article
|
| 5. |
Microsoft Business Network (MBN)--Coming of Age? Part Three: Challenges and Competition (4 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Sep 3, 2004 Abstract : While on the surface, there are few economic or strategic reasons for organizations to persist with electronic data interchange (EDI), many seem reluctant to adopt the alternative at this stage. In fact, there has been almost negligible growth in the number of organizations replacing their EDI-based systems with XML.
Type: Article
|
| 6. |
When EDI Goes Native, Everything Falls in Sync with IQMS (4 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Apr 8, 2005 Abstract : IQMS's IQ EDI module is a natively-built solution that deals with the complexities of data synchronization among EDI documents and eliminates the need for third-party translators.
Type: Article
|
| 7. |
Pain and Gain of Integrated EDI Part Three: Other Industry Gains (5 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Mar 23, 2005 Abstract : Many small and medium companies find themselves under pressure to deploy the same EDI system as a major customer, making it a basic cost of doing business with the market leaders.
Type: Article
|
| 8. |
Microsoft Business Network (MBN)--Coming of Age? Part One: Event Summary (4 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Sep 1, 2004 Abstract : While the Microsoft Business Network (MBN) product is worth considering for a number of compelling reasons, it will take some immense doing before it becomes a retailers' equivalent of what the Sabre reservation system means to airline agents.
Type: Article
|
| 9. |
ROI Systems Catching Up With e-Commerce (3 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Nov 3, 2000 Abstract : ROI Systems continues with its practice of cautious new technology adoption. On October 10, it announced the offering of XML-based EDI for its customers.
Type: Article
|
| 10. |
Navision Becoming More Visible (3 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Apr 21, 2000 Abstract : In March Navision Software a/s announced it signed a global sales and distribution agreement with Microsoft Corporation Inc. that enables the company's partner network of more than 900 Navision Solution Centers to sell and distribute Microsoft BackOffice products integrated with Navision solutions.
Type: Article
|