Re: PostgreSQL as an application server - Mailing list pgsql-hackers
From | google04mn@emailias.com (matt nations) |
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Subject | Re: PostgreSQL as an application server |
Date | |
Msg-id | 97ef4f4.0408071232.6aa43bd5@posting.google.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | PostgreSQL as an application server ("Jonathan M. Gardner" <jgardner@jonathangardner.net>) |
List | pgsql-hackers |
ned@nedscape.com (Ned Lilly) wrote in message news:<4113AB0A.5020903@nedscape.com>... > Jonathan, > > This is exactly how my company has built a very robust ERP application. See www.openmfg.com. > Hi Mr. Lilly: I not sure who to address this question to at your company. I'm a valued added reseller who combines a dozen plus products, CAD engineering and project management to serve a construction niche market. Probably a third of our dollar purchases go to our primary OEM. Though they are vital to us we are probably less than 5% of their sales. Back in March 2003 I lobbied (e-mailed .pdf files and web URLs; made calls, followed up) both the company president and the general manager of that OEM to consider OpenMFG in lieu of a MRP system proposed by a Michigan based Microsoft "partner". Last week the general manager mentioned in passing that she was going back to the office this weekend to begin learning their new OpenMFG software. [ Hummm. I wish we were in "the loop" more. :>) ] Our micro business also wants to update its accounting, sales and project management software/processes. Even SOHO businesses like ourselves dispair of order entry and vendor acknowledgements via a stream of faxes. As an on-going buyer from your OpemMFG customer how can we can easily upload/download purchase orders and receive back acknowledgements? From a transaction processing standpoint faxes are utterly "brain dead". E-mailing Excel files is marginally better but still very labor intensive, error prone and not easily manipulated or indexed. This next week we will contract with a free lance programmer/analyst to update our Access '97 VBA based accounting software to an Access 2003 front end and a SQL Server 2005 Express backend (ODBC links). This involves upsizing our static customer, vendor, project and job related revenue and cost transaction data to a format we can manipulate in Access 2003 or independently. Does your "Sales Order Management" have some kind of file related batch processing that would allow us to e-mail orders to our OEM (your OpenMFG customer)? This OEM says they only need occassional dial-up for internet access so web portal data entry is not an option. That's OK. I prefer not to rekey orders on our end anyway. Presently our faxed orders to this OEM are 1-5 pages of bone wearying detail printed from Excel spreadsheets. The detail comes from macros acting on "lookup" Excel worksheets, reformated and with quantities added, extended and totaled. The "lookup" Excel worksheets are created from this OEM's product-price schedules faxed to us, OCR'd, edited and copied to Excel. Is there any way our OEM can grab a snap shot of the pertinent tables from your OpenMFG product PostgreSQL database, export them (file format?) and e-mail to us? Then we could revised our Excel quotation spreadsheets to "lookup" product/price/description/weight/dimensions/cubes/notations from SQL tables (via ODBC, OLE.DB or 3rd party software). If we get the job and the quote becomes an order we could then sort product line-items by OEM, copy/paste to Access 2003 and (hopefully) export to whatever file format will batch process back into OpenMFG's "Sales Order Management" module. For what it may be worth we've already started on the XSL/XSLT learning curve with Altova's XMLSPY 2004 Professional Edition. Though XML is intended for machine to machine interaction we use XML to keep track of sheets of different sizes and hundreds of "off cut" parts. XML is the native import/export format for the panel nesting program we use. We've gotten familar with cutting and pasting the XML data file. Does this have application? See especially http://www.altova.com/whatsnew.html#db . I'm probably being simplistic above. Hey, a micro/SOHO distributor can dream, can't they? How far through does OpenMFG (or related software) followed the "food chain" downstream? Thank you in advance for your thoughts (or referral within your company to whoever can assist us). Alanzo Manton
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