Excel-me-do

From: ANT_THOMAS25 Jan 2017 22:20
To: koswix 13 of 17
>>In fact, one of the examples we were given in class for what it's meant to replace is people in different departments using their own spreadsheets

The data in question is actually generated from one system, and needs all the by-hand editing to prep it for import in another :'D (fail)
From: koswix26 Jan 2017 00:26
To: ANT_THOMAS 14 of 17
Just fax it over to the dba :'D
EDITED: 26 Jan 2017 00:27 by KOSWIX
From: william (WILLIAMA)26 Jan 2017 01:18
To: koswix 15 of 17
Be serious. ERP is a process where 80% of the investment funding for a business goes to building a tiny system of entirely new work which is (1) unrelated to the day to day work of the business which continues to run on whatever under-funded IT it already had and (2) packed to the gills with very sexy acronyms and plain English words such as 'digital' and 'big'. This tiny system will 'provide new and unexpected opportunities' for the business as opposed to aiding the old and difficult problems that need to be addressed. The new and unexpected opportunities will have a dramatic impact on the career prospects of a small coterie of consultants and company staff around the senior VP running ERP. They will thrive at huge expense until the time comes to move on to a new project.
From: koswix26 Jan 2017 09:59
To: william (WILLIAMA) 16 of 17
That was pretty much my understanding of it after taking that course, and I think that must have been what they wanted us to take away from it, seeing as I got a ridiculously high score for my exam paper for saying as much.

That case study is interesting though, your post on mainframes reminded me about it the other day: old mainframe system running 420k transactions per night, shiny new erp system running on shiny new hp servers managed 10k transactions per night.
From: ANT_THOMAS26 Jan 2017 10:22
To: koswix 17 of 17
An overnight job failed last night, meaning the software which forecasts demand is showing all the wrong data.