| 1. |
The ROI Dilemma - Part 1 - Look at how bad you Look! ( Pages)
by Bob Riefstahl
Jan 17, 2003 Abstract : If you're going to use ROI in order to find new business or, justify your solution, be careful. ROI is a loaded gun and you might just shoot yourself.
|
| 2. |
First Look: Peregrine Offers Cradle to Grave Procurement ( Pages)
by D. Geller
Feb 1, 2000 Abstract : Peregrine's Get.Resources is an E-procurement system that contains features to manage the acquisition of capital assets and track their lifecycle costs. The product supports a number of different kinds of supplier arrangements ranging from internally hosted catalogs to links with Commerce One's MarketSite. This article offers a pre-release look at Peregrine's product and strategy.
|
| 3. |
The Many Faces of PLM Part Two: The Future of the PLM Suite ( Pages)
by Jim Brown
Dec 30, 2003 Abstract : The future of the PLM Suite will include more applications that cover product-related functionality and further expand the benefits available. As the PLM Suite matures, companies will benefit from increased functionality and increased integration between business processes. The ultimate expression of this more mature solution will result in a broad suite of focused, integrated applications that leverage a core of unified, structured product data - the PLM Platform.
|
| 4. |
Welcome to ERP - Distribution Showdown! Epicor Enterprise vs. JDA Supply Chain Planning & Optimization Suite vs. Pronto Xi ( Pages)
by Larry Blitz
May 23, 2008 Abstract : I'm Larry Blitz, editor of Technology Evaluation Centers’ (TEC) Vendor Showdown series. Welcome to our latest: ERP - Distribution Showdown. You’ll notice this one has a broader focus than Showdowns we’ve done in the past. Again we’ll be comparing three vendor solutions head-to-head, but not just on functionality. This time we’ll also look at the industries these solutions support, how well they cover different portions of the mid-market segment, and how their installed bases break out geographically. Of course, functionality is again a key component of this Showdown, broken down into four main distribution areas and 13 subareas. We hope you find today’s Showdown helpful and informative, and invite your comments and questions at showdown@technologyevaluation.com.
|
| 5. |
Who to Blame for Project Failure? Look Up - Not Down, Not Left, Not Right. ( Pages)
by Olin Thompson
Sep 20, 2002 Abstract : Projects do fail. They fail from many different reasons. But the person at the top of the organization can stop or fix most of these problems before they derail the project. That person is the only one with the power to do so.
|
| 6. |
Oracle Product Showdown! JD Edwards EnterpriseOne vs. E-Business Suite ( Pages)
by Neil Stolovitsky
Sep 12, 2007 Abstract : In JD Edwards EnterpriseOne and E-Business Suite, Oracle has two of the most popular enterprise solutions available in the marketplace today. To compare these two Oracle products, we looked at six standard enterprise resource planning (ERP) modules: supply chain management, distribution process management, web commerce, human resources, financials, and product technology. To eliminate any chance of bias and to ensure a level playing field, all 3,214 criteria that make up these six modules (and their submodules) in our ERP Evaluation Center were given equal weight and priority…
|
| 7. |
Who to Blame for Project Failure? Look Up—Not Down, Not Left, Not Right ( Pages)
by Olin Thompson
Jul 25, 2008 Abstract : Project failure is not a nice topic. None of us wants to be involved in a failure. But when a failure occurs, we feel compelled to assign blame. But who really is to blame, and how can a company avoid the same problems in the future?
|
| 8. |
The Handspring Visor Goes Wireless ~Look out Palm VII! ( Pages)
by P. Hayes
Jul 21, 2000 Abstract : The Palm VII has the advantage of being an all-in-one device, however the Handspring Visor comes with 8MB of RAM and can be upgraded, allowing a user adequate room for growth.
|
| 9. |
Wireless Palm VII ~ Look Ma No Hands! ( Pages)
by P. Hayes
Jun 26, 2000 Abstract : The Palm VII is a logical wireless extension of the Palm Pilot platform. The Palm VII is a data-driven device allowing access to such information as news, sports, weather, e-mail, driving directions, and yellow pages.
|