Interesting parallel, I used to work at epicor. Not sure which product you
were referencing but their ERP/MRP stuff was born in the pick database and
the unix platform. They made it work on a windows box because their
customers didn't want to go out and find unix admins but it performed
better and was more stable on unix. Pick (now the 'U2' products at IBM) was
pretty proprietary and the app code that made it into an embedded database
product was done using system builder 4gl. Originally a cui, they made gui
screens to try and give it a windows look and feel. When I left the company
in 04, they were porting the whole thing to a dotnet framework, service
oriented architecture.
Kevin Brake, MSSE
Applications and Business Analyst - Enterprise Solutions
Information & Technology Services
City of Goodyear
190 N. Litchfield Rd.
Goodyear, AZ 85338
623-882-7857
623-882-7858 (Fax)
kevin.brake@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Adam West
<adamster@xxxxxxx
om> To
Sent by: Midrange Systems Technical
midrange-l-bounce Discussion
s@xxxxxxxxxxxx <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
cc
11/18/2008 04:30 Subject
PM Re: ERP systems on i versus ERP
systems on Windows
Please respond to
Midrange Systems
Technical
Discussion
<midrange-l@midra
nge.com>
It's not just impressive screens, it's the user functionality that is
missing in the Iseries packages. We are speaking of another company that
might bite the dust, heaven forbid. But the users are the users.
Some packages would include Epicor, Blue Cherry, Apprise.
Don't underrate functionality.
Thank you,
Adam West
http://www.amsterdamcentral.net
________________________________
From: Paul Nelson <nelsonp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 3:35:22 PM
Subject: RE: ERP systems on i versus ERP systems on Windows
"Management by Airline Magazine", perhaps?
Paul Nelson
Office 512-392-2577
Cell 708-670-6978
nelsonp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
-----Original Message-----
From: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
ChadB@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 2:11 PM
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion
Subject: Re: ERP systems on i versus ERP systems on Windows
Businesses run themselves on powerful databases and reliable systems, not
impressive screens. Unfortunately, that's not necessarily the way some
executives make platform
decisions.
<elehti@ameristar
fence.com>
Sent by: To
midrange-l-bounce <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
s@xxxxxxxxxxxx
cc
Subject 11/18/2008 03:05 ERP systems on i versus ERP
systems PM on
Windows
Please respond to
Midrange
Systems
Technical
Discussion
<midrange-l@midra
nge.com>
Okay Adam West, tell us more about the ERP packages that run on Windows.
I have never heard of any vendor offering a true Enterprise Resource
system on Windows.
EricL
<Adam West> I have recently been looking at ERP packages from both i
based, either RPG or Java, mostly RPG and the Windows based. I can tell
you that the W based are more impressive screens. </Adam>
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