Saturday, June 30, 2012

ERP vendors Syspro, Unit4 launch app stores

The app store model popularized by Apple is gaining further adoption in the world of ERP (enterprise-resource-planning) software, with new stores announced this week by Syspro and Unit4.

Syspro's app store, which was announced on Friday, will be available "shortly" and will eventually feature thousands of applications, the company said in a statement. Publishers can provide their offerings on the store for no charge, receive a one-time payment, "or protect intellectual property through Syspro's licensing model," it added.

[ Discover what's new in business applications with InfoWorld's Technology: Applications newsletter. | Get the latest insight on the tech news that matters from InfoWorld's Tech Watch blog. ]

About 90 percent of Syspro's sales come through channel partners, and the bulk of those thousands of applications will likely be generated through them, according to ERP analyst Cindy Jutras of the consulting firm Mint Jutras. The company's software features an architecture that allows the creation of added functionality "from the outside in as a component, without touching the source code," she said.
Bucking a trend, however, the initial focus of the store will be more on desktop-based add-ons, not mobile applications, Jutras said.

Syspro sells to smaller and medium-sized companies, focusing on the food, medical device, electronics, and machinery verticals, Jutras said. Its customer base is not necessarily clamoring for an app store, as they typically aren't on the leading edge of software adoption, she added. Still, the store will have value in that it will allow customers to broaden the capabilities of their core systems, she said.

In addition, "the kind of company they sell to will really like the whole consumer approach to having star ratings and reviews [for applications]," Jutras said.

Syspro's store "allows customers to download highly granular intellectual content from the company's ecosystem," said analyst Michael Krigsman, CEO of the consulting firm Asuret, in an email. "It is a true user-to-user system. Syspro's challenge will be convincing its ecosystem to participate and make the app store a vibrant marketplace."

App stores make sense for ERP, Krigsman added: "They reduce customization costs because customers can download narrow customizations and solutions that other users have already developed."

Meanwhile, earlier this week Unit4 announced an app store of its own, which focuses on analytics software.
A set of 35 "bite-sized" analytic applications will be available through the Unit4 Solution Store, the company said in a statement. The applications are organized around various business roles and questions, such as the status of a budget, or employee performance.

They will work in junction with Unit4's Agresso and Coda financials software and are "mobile-accessible," Unit4 said. Pricing starts at $6 per user per month, and it is possible to have them running in just a couple of days, according to the company.

The applications are "90 percent complete" once a customer submits an order. Doing so triggers a message to Unit4's consulting team for the final configuration. It's also possible for customers to deploy the applications on their own if desired, according to a statement.

Unit4's store is set for a July 16 launch in the U.K. German customers will get access on Aug. 1, with a Norway rollout planned for the end of September, Unit4 said. Other countries will be added later this year.

While the applications are "attractively designed," the requirements of manual downloading and installation are weaknesses in Unit4's store, albeit ones that should be smoothed out over time, Krigsman said.



Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/applications/erp-vendors-syspro-unit4-launch-app-stores-196735

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Google cracks open Jelly Bean OS at I/O

SAN FRANCISCO — Android OS version 4.1, also known as Jelly Bean, will ship mid-July, Google announced at its I/O Conference this week. This new version of the operating system includes a ground-up reworking of the graphics rendering system, and brings triple buffering and vsync to bear on all OS animations.


Codenamed Project Butter, the effort to smooth out animations in Jelly Bean was demonstrated with a high-speed camera. Dave Burke, the Google engineer charged with directing Project Butter, said that all animations are now rendered at 60 frames per second, across all applications and without the need for new code from third-party application developers.


Those independent developers will also be pleased with another major change in Jelly Bean: Applications are now encrypted with a device-specific key. This will help to cut down on the rampant piracy present on the Android platform. (A quick search of popular file-sharing site The Pirate Bay yielded dozens of Android collections for download, with some pirate torrents that included well over 3,000 Android applications.)


Hugo Barra, director of Android platform at Google, said that signed encryption will ensure developers will earn money from their work. He also reintroduced the revamped Google Play store, formerly known as the Android Marketplace. The new store resembles the store interface used by Amazon's Kindle Fire tablet, which offers large boxes with movies, books and music made available for purchase in a flashier style than the typical app store’s.


For developers looking to optimize their Android applications, Jelly Bean includes a new tool known as Systrace. This new performance profiler offers a dynamic graph of performance across the Android operating system. In a demonstration, Barra showed a profile in which the database was the bottleneck, and Systrace showed a gap in all performance graphs whenever the database was used, making it obvious where the problem lied.


For hardware manufacturers and designers, Android now offers a Platform Development Kit. The PDK includes documentation and source code for the low-level APIs in Android, and will help hardware designers to build their devices from the ground up to support Android. The PDK will be made available two to three months before every new Android OS release, starting with Jelly Bean, and its PDK is available today.


Accessibility is a major new theme in Jelly Bean as well. The Android team has unleashed speech-to-text recognition from the Internet, meaning offline users can now talk to their phones. This has further-reaching implications for blind users, who are now targeted with a combination of this speech recognition, new gesture-based interface controls, and added support for braille devices.


Tuesday, June 19, 2012

College Management Software

Below keyword search show you the importance of the software for college management.

college management software

  

student management software

  

college management system

  

classroom management software

  

library management software

  

education software

educational software

software development

 

office management software

education management system

timetable management software

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Joomla Expert

Helping keywords to find Expert Joomla developers,

  
joomla expert


joomla experts

  
professional joomla templates

  
joomla developers

  
joomla websites

  
joomla website designer


joomla template design

  
joomla designers


best joomla templates

  
custom joomla templates

  
joomla website development

  
joomla template designer


joomla programmers

Monday, June 4, 2012

Custom Software Development

Custom Software Development is one software which fulfills your best needs and gives flexible support.


Below keywords help you to find related resources,

custom software development

custom software design

custom software developer
  
customized software development
  
custom application development

custom software programming

custom business software development

custom product development

 
Design by Free WordPress Themes | Bloggerized by Lasantha - Premium Blogger Themes | Dcreators

Love Live Gallery

|

gallery wallpaper app

|

birds sound

|

birds gallery