Andrew Karasev is Chief Technology Officer in Alba Spectrum Technologies � USA nationwide Great Plains, Microsoft CRM customization company, based in Chicago, California, Arizona, Minnesota, Texas, Florida, New York, Washington, Georgia, Canada, UK, Australia and having locations in multiple states and internationally (), he is CMA, Great Plains Certified Master, Dexterity, SQL, C#.Net, Crystal Reports and Microsoft CRM SDK developer. You can contact Andrew: .
Microsoft Project Green : Dynamics GP, AX, NAV, SL, CRM Microsoft Business Solutions Great Plains, Navision, Axapta, Solomon and CRM are strategically renamed into Microsoft Dynamics GP. NAV, AX, SL, CRM respectively. We had huge number of calls from current and potential customers who needed to know the answers on a set of very obvious and logical questions. In this small article we’ll try to communicate our opinion and what we know from...... Similar Editorial : by Thomas R. Cutler. | Source : Microsoft 2000 Excel
Microsoft Dynamics Great Plains Recycling Business Automation New version: Microsoft Dynamics Great Plains 9.0 will have more options for C#/VB.Net developer, including more exposure to .Net XML web services and Visual Studio. However the GP workstation client code is Microsoft Dexterity written application and we will be focusing on Great Plains Dexterity customization.Industry Specifics. Recycling containers are rented to customers and based on...... Similar Editorial : by Andrew Karasev. | Source : Microsoft 2000 Excel
MS Dynamics GP : Dexterity, VBA, SQL, Crystal, EConnect Microsoft Great Plains is main Microsoft Business Solutions accounting package for the US market. It has multiple customization/modification/reporting tools. Currently there is upgrade campaign to version 8.0 and due to the discontinuation of the technical support for Microsoft Great Plains Standard on Ctree and Pervasive SQL - we see substantial increase in migration needs: migration...... Similar Editorial : by Andrew Karasev. | Source : Microsoft 2000 Excel
Microsoft Great Plains: Chicago ERP Market Overview In this small article we will review Chicago ERP market: Chicago with suburbs, Northwest Indiana, downstate Illinois and St. Luis. Let us begin with small introduction.Microsoft Business Solutions has recently renamed its products – new unifying brand name will be Microsoft Dynamics. Project Green should end up in interface unification and probably database merging for all former...... Similar Editorial : by Andrew Karasev. | Source : Microsoft 2000 Excel
Microsoft Dynamics GP Offshore Remote Support – Overview As so-called Project Green is rolling out – you should expect more logic to be transferred into Microsoft Business Portal, and into Microsoft Outlook (currently Microsoft CRM has outlook client and Microsoft Small Business Accounting allows you to generate invoices in Outlook directly, plus promote contacts from Outlook to SBA).As we see and expect new high-tech and business systems market trends ...... Similar Editorial : by Samuel joseph. | Source : Microsoft 2000 Excel
Microsoft Dynamics GP: French, Dutch, German Versions Microsoft is on the way of Project Green realization. Former Microsoft Great Plains, now Microsoft Dynamics GP version 9.0 is marching across the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa. Historically, however there is the whole cluster of former Great Plains Software customers in France, Belgium, Netherlands, Germany and Poland. With the acquisition of Navision Software...... Similar Editorial : by Andrew Karasev. | Source : Microsoft 2000 Excel
Microsoft Great Plains: Houston ERP Market Notes In this small article we would like to share our consulting experience, serving Houston business metro ERP/MRP/CRM market, in our case this is Microsoft Great Plains, Microsoft CRM, Microsoft Navision and Microsoft Axapta implementation, customization, integration & reporting. Let’s make introduction on the products. Microsoft Business Solutions renamed its ERP products: Microsoft...... Similar Editorial : by Andrew Karasev. | Source : Microsoft 2000 Excel
Brazil: ERP Selection – Oracle, SAP, Microsoft In the beginning of 21st century we can recognize the trend in international business. Multinational corporations are moving their manufacturing facilities and sales operations to Brazil. Typical scenario – regional office is established in Sao Paulo or Rio de Janeiro and manufacturing facility in Salvador, Porto Alegre, Curitiba, Belo Horizonte, Recife, Manaus, etc. The first...... Similar Editorial : by Andrew Karasev. | Source : Microsoft 2000 Excel
Oracle Financials, MS Navision & Axapta, SAP Biz One MRP Brazil One of the first questions for multinational company/corporation to move to new market is ERP implementation, customization, report tuning, integration for newly established subsidiary. The specific of South American and in particularly Brazilian market is manufacturing or production outsourcing to Brazil. We will try to provide the first level comparison or readiness of the major...... Similar Editorial : by Andrew Karasev. | Source : Microsoft Access Form
MS Navision São Paulo ERP Notes Microsoft Navision is localized and translated into Brazilian Portuguese to be efficient MRP/ERP/accounting solution for Brazilian enterprises as well as for subsidiaries or manufacturing facilities of multinational corporations and companies, participating in international business. We plan to inform potential customer about the situation on Brazilian ERP market and particularly in Sao...... Similar Editorial : by Andrew Karasev. | Source : Microsoft Access Form
Microsoft Navision Implementation In Rio De Janeiro ERP Market Major ERP/MRP vendors, such as Oracle. SAP, Microsoft Business Solutions are present on Brazilian market, in this small article we would like to highlight MBS Navision, especially in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo, plus the economy situation in Rio and its ERP/MRP marketEconomy. Rio's harbor is deep enough for the largest vessels to come alongside the wharves, which lie near the city center....... Similar Editorial : by Robert Horowitz. | Source : Microsoft Access Form
Microsoft Dynamics GP & CRM For Midsize Business We were discussing the way large corporation could choose in minimizing ERP platform risks. This approach however could not work for the midsize business or nonprofit organization.In our opinion, balancing the risk of one-vendor-approach is not economically feasible and should be avoided. This means that you need to decide if you plan to be Microsoft-oriented or Java/Unix/Linux/Oracle...... Similar Editorial : by Andrew Karasev. | Source : Microsoft Access Form
Business Portal & Microsoft Dynamics GP 9.0 Highlights Microsoft Dynamics GP is new name for Microsoft Great Plains and first wave of former Microsoft Project Green. You probably have the impression that Microsoft is leveraging all the set of its technologies: .Net, MS SQL Server, Sharepoint, Visual Studio, Active Directory, MS Exchange, XML Web Services. The fact that Microsoft has several ERPs: Microsoft Great Plains / Dynamics GP,...... Similar Editorial : by Talent Onions. | Source : Microsoft Access Form
Corporate ERP Selection: Microsoft Dynamics GP In our opinion, traditional approach when you select ERP/MRP system for large or mid-size company by functionality, database and hardware platform should be revised. We are convinced that new generation of Windows servers plus the reliability of relatively inexpensive database platform, such as Microsoft SQL Server, enable large corporation to decrease the cost of hardware, database and ERM...... Similar Editorial : by Robert Horowitz. | Source : Microsoft Access Form
Great Plains Dexterity & Microsoft Dynamics Customization The history of the Dexterity. Great Plains Dexterity - is proprietary programming language and technology, designed back to earlier 1990th with the goal to build platform independent graphical accounting package - Great Plains Dynamics. Dexterity itself is written in C (following popular those days hope - that C will provide platform independence). You can install Dexterity from Great Plains 7.5...... Similar Editorial : by Andrew Karasev. | Source : Microsoft Access Form