WMS – Bitlog Launch Seminar, Dubai 15 June 2015

June 10th, 2015 by Stephen Jones No comments »

Attend our free breakfast seminar and network with local industry logistics and WMS professionals.
FAST ROI for Distribution and Retail
Monday15th of June, 2015 , 08:00~11:00Microsoft Gulf, Building 8 Dubai Internet City, UAE

EVENT SCHEDULE
08:30 Registration & Breakfast
09:00 Introductions
09:05 Market and industry changes and WMS selection
How to choose the Right Product + Right Partner
Stephen Jones, Director, Synergy Software Systems
09:30 Next Generation WMS, Fred Boström, Bitlog
10:00 Reach fast ROI with Bitlog WMS, Hultafors Group case study
10:15 Bitlog GCC Launch offer
10.30 Discussion & Coffee

Bitlog WMS Launch event benefits :

Current trends that impact warehousing operations
How to select a warehouse management system,
Meet a proven new, innovative player in the GCC-market,
Meet the implementation partner
Find out how you can optimize your warehouse management,
to reduce cost, increase on time fulfillment and create more profit
A great opportunity to network during breakfast and coffee
Find out about the exclusive Bitlog WMS launch offer for seminar participants

For more information or to register contact :
sales@synergy-software.com +971 (0)55 7186133

Note there are only a few seats left.

Coolan- TCO for cloud or data centre- how to cut or at least know your costs

June 4th, 2015 by Stephen Jones No comments »

At the 2015 summit of the Open Compute Project (OCP), Amir Michael, a well-respected data-center engineer and a founder of OCP, offered a surprise during his presentation. “Something not often talked about in the industry,” Michael mentions. “There is a trend of people moving off the cloud.”

The purpose of Coolan, an analytics platform, is to help data-center operators reduce downtime and lower infrastructure costs by analyzing metadata on how the servers are performing.

Trying to figure out the TCO (Total-Cost-of-Ownership) for your compute infrastructure is no easy task,” explains Michael. “With the proliferation of public, private, and hybrid clouds, not to mention the ever-growing number of Buzzword-as-a-Service paradigms, anyone in charge of their company’s infrastructure faces a difficult decision: Should you build or acquire your own data center, lease space in a co-located facility, or rent a piece of the cloud?”

Some of the cost points the TCO Model addresses include:
•Whether to build your own servers or buy OEM
•What type of hardware components to use
•Whether to upgrade systems or deploy new ones
•The cost of capital
•The data-center PUE
•The amount of power the network is consuming

And the ultimate question: stay in the cloud, go colo, or build a private data center?
•Managed services in the cloud wins if a company requires more computing power than storage.
•In a related sense, the amount of storage required has a huge impact on choosing a deployment method.
•The cost to grow is less for in-house data centers than cloud-managed services or leasing more colocation space.

Microsoft Mobile productivity apps – is Wunderlist the next ?

June 4th, 2015 by Stephen Jones No comments »

Rumors hit the Internet that Microsoft might be in talks to acquire the popular “to-do” app Wunderlist, a new report in The Wall Street Journal, indicates Microsoft has purchased the company behind the app, the German-based 6Wunderkinder, for between $100 and $200 million.

Neither company officially confirmed this deal, but is seems that the Wunderlist team will remain in its home office in Berlin, Germany to continue working on the app.

This is the latest acquisition by Microsoft for a mobile productivity app company. It bought the e-mail client Acompli in late 2014 and put its technology into the latest versions of its Outlook mobile apps. Microsoft also acquired Sunrise Calendar in early 2015.

So why Wunderlsit- well its maybe the least intimidating Task Manager

Wunderlist Features

Lists: One of the easiest things to grasp is that you get to set up lists, and put things in those lists.
Even I can do that in Wunderlist without any guidance so it is easy to use. Set up lists and put stuff in the list, and tick things off when done

Hashtags: You have multiple lists, and an item on one list that is related to items in other lists. Hashtags in Wunderlist lets show items that may exist in one or more of your lists together in one place.

Collaboration: One of the advantages of a digital list over a paper one is the ability to share it with others. With the simplicity of Wunderlist, once you invite someone to share a list with you, they won’t need you to give them a long explanation of how to use it. Share, add items, tick things off, add comments, assign tasks, attach files, and you have a system that will allow you to work together without sending emails like “Can you do this?” or “Here’s that file”

Platforms: One of the reasons why productivity tools fail is that no one wants to use won’t use a system if it isn’t handy – i.e. wherever you are. It’s great to have your lists available in a browser, or on whatever device you’re using with Wunderlist.

Email : The whole point of using these productivity tools is to get out of email. It’s more than that. It’s about separating tasks and resources so you’re not digging through piles of emails to find that attachment someone sent or what the deadline was for the report you have to write. It’s about working from your own clearly prioritised plan, rather than letting your inbox dictate your day and your priorities. Wunderlist also has some email notification options that you can use to work efficiently without getting sucked back in to a sea of email.

Wunderlist is good for:
• People on the go, with multi-platform availability.
• Non techy people, with one of the simplest interfaces I’ve seen.
• GTD enthusiasts, with things like hashtags to manage contexts.
• Small teams, for sharing and commenting functionality.

Wunderlist may do well in every day use
• Shopping lists
• ‘Read later’ lists, if you don’t use something like Pocket
• Idea lists, like blog posts about productivity…

Comparisons with other task list tools

Wunderlist vs Todoist

Todoist is good for managing tasks. The tree structure in Todoist gives visibility of high level tasks and their breakdown into sub-tasks all at once. Wunderlist supports sub-tasks, but you can only see those when you have the main task within the list selected.

Todoist labels are equivalent to hashtags, and you have to upgrade to premium Todoist to use these whereas hashtags in Wunderlist are available in the free version.

In general, Todoist can be a bit more intimidating for someone new to such tools

Wunderlist vs Trello

Items on a Wunderlist list are a bit simpler than cards on a Trello list. It means they have less functionality, so this could be a positive or a negative .

View and group multiple lists and their items in one screen on Trello, using boards. Wunderlist can only view one list at a time, even though it’s still possible to use drag & drop to move things between lists.

Trello has the edge when it comes to an intuitive visual representation but if you don’t need that ‘big picture’ view, then Wunderlist is O.K..

Wunderlist vs iOS Reminders

Wunderlist offers the simplicity that you get when using the native list app on iOS but adds extra functionality . When you use hashtags, attachments, comments or sub tasks then it’s worth installing the Wunderlist app.

An advantage of Reminders is Siri integration. Press a button and speak makes adding something to a list the simplest process possible ensures you actually use a list rather than scribbling on sticky notes. If you’re struggling to get into that habit of a technology-based solution, this could be what makes it stick

Integrations: So many apps and systems so how will; a new onework with what we already have. Here are a couple of useful Wunderlist integrations:
• Dropbox for your file storage.
• Calendar view of tasks or other items with due dates.
• IFTTT recipes that integrate Wunderlist with other systems, although Wunderlist isn’t actually supported you can do lots through email commands.

For such a simple and easy to use product, Wunderlist has lots of functionality and it’s great for people who are trying to get in the habit of using an app to improve their productivity and they find the other options intimidating.

Windows 10 – out on July 29th

June 4th, 2015 by Stephen Jones No comments »

Microsoft announced today that it will launch Windows 10 on July 29th, and encourages Windows 7 and 8.1 users to reserve their free upgrade with a notification in their task bar.

Upgrade will mean saying goodbye to Windows Media Center, the card game Hearts, and Windows 7’s desktop gadgets

Anyone in the habit of using floppy disks on Windows will also have to install new drivers, and Microsoft warns that watching DVDs will require “separate playback software.”

Microsoft manager Gabriel Aul said on Twitter that a DVD option for Windows 10 is coming “later this year,” but early upgraders can always download VLC instead.

Limitations for some of Windows 10’s most exciting features:
– Cortana will only be available in the US, Canada, UK, China, France, Italy, Germany, and Spain at launch,

– Windows Hello (which offers support for various biometric passwords) will need an infrared camera for facial recognition, or a supported fingerprint reader.

– The Xbox Music and Xbox Video streaming apps will also be constrained by the usual, complex web of region-based licenses.
– Microsoft has also changed how updates will work with Windows 10. Although the Pro and Enterprise editions will both be able to defer updates, Windows 10 Home users will not have the option. Updates will instead be downloaded and installed automatically as soon as they’re available.

System requirements for the new OS for PCs and tablets need a 1GHz processor, 1GB of RAM, 16GB of storage, and a display resolution of at least 1,024 x 600 are required. These specs are a bit higher for the 64-bit version of Windows 10 but for these details and more, you can check out Microsoft’s full specs page.

Ax 7 is coming to a cloud near you

June 2nd, 2015 by Stephen Jones No comments »

Dan Brown, Microsoft’s AX R&D general manager, in keynote sessions in Orlando last week said that the next major version of Microsoft Dynamics AX, codenamed AX 7, is expected to be released at the end of the year exclusively on the Microsoft Azure platform.

An on-premise version is expected to be available six months later release.

Three primary updates will characterize AX 7:
– a new user experience,
– the extended use of Microsoft Dynamics Lifecycle Services (LCS),
– the prevalence of the Microsoft Cloud, or Azure.

The AX 7 workspace is reimagined as a panorama of colorful, pictured tiles that quickly allows the user to view to-do tasks, urgent actions, and any other work-related activities. This will enable users to share common activities with other end-users.

With the LCS task recorder, users can record and annotate tasks and keep other end-users informed.

There’s also the ability to link two browsers enabling users to collaborate side-by-side on a double screen.

We are trying to eliminate clicks and give the production planner power within this user experience,” says Brown.

With AX 7 Microsoft is also making efforts to improve interoperability with its other products like Visual Studio, Office 365, Power BI, SharePoint, and Yammer.
AX 7 will more deeply embed Management Reporter in the interface, to make it the corporate performance management tool of record for AX ad an integral part of the initial deployment. “The more we bring these things together so you are just using the product, the better the overall experience,” Brown said.

X++ code customizations should remain unchanged, making upgrading to AX 7 seamless. However, developers should prepare to work with Visual Studio as their AX 7 development environment. AX will retain its X++ programming language, which is effectively a .NET language now, Brown said. The process for packaging and deploying X++ to an AX 7 instance is done through LCS.

Version 7 will be the first major release since last year’s AX 2012 R3, which added warehouse and transportation management, retail features, and tablet-based point of sale (POS).

This month i.e. June, AX 2012 CU9 will include rolled-up hotfixes, regulatory requirements, and platform capabilities, including compatibility for any new version of Windows.

Microsoft recognizes that not every business is keen on going from 0 to 120 mph on the cloud. “The idea of a hybrid cloud is not new,” says Brown. “We want to evolve to the cloud with you.”

Once the AX 7 on-premise version is released, you’ll have the option of using as much or as little of the cloud that you want. The software will also run on Azure Pack, identically packaging your data both on the cloud and on-premise, resulting in more symmetry and less friction.

Still, when it comes to Azure, companies still have questions about :security, privacy, and sovereignty of data. and ho to budget the cost “I think trustworthy computing is partially about privacy, but it’s also about high availability and disaster recovery, and redundancy,” said Brown. “Microsoft and Azure are investing heavily in data protection and security, and monitoring in our data centers. Microsoft has the widest range of data centers in the world.”

Brown hinted that he foresees more capabilities for mobile and on-premise in the future. ”
About Wendy Scheuring

Inflationary Wave Theory

June 1st, 2015 by Stephen Jones No comments »

Is 2015 a turning point in global inflation and, if it is, what can you do to weather the storm? Pete Comely, author of a new book ‘Inflation Matters: Inflationary Wave Theory, its impact on inflation past and present … and the deflation yet to come’, explains…

Recent inflation data show that average prices in the UK have remained static for a second month in a row. History suggests that because of demographic changes we may now be about to enter a period of near-zero inflation for a lot of this century. This is going to have major implications for many aspects of life, but especially managing wealth.

Average prices were unchanged in the year to March, as measured by the Consumer Prices Index. This was due to a combination of a decline in the price of goods (-2.1 per cent) such as petrol, energy bills and food being balanced by increases in services (+2.4 per cent) including train and plane fares. However the declines are largely one-off changes and in a year when they fall out of the calculation, CPI will more than likely return to nearer 2 per cent again. But the current period of near-deflation is a symptom of a larger effect taking place across the globe that few have grasped the implications of yet.

The lower commodity prices we are seeing are as a result of supply exceeding demand. Moreover as we go forward in the 21st Century demand is going to fall still further and deflation is going to become a frequent theme. Populations in most countries are ageing. The average number of children women are having is below the replacement level of 2.1 in every developed market. The UK is 1.9 and Japan just 1.4. It is also low in South America and most of Asia. By 2050, some estimate that world population may even start to decline. In addition the ageing populations around the globe are consuming less too. The net effect of these demographic changes will be lower demand and prices.

This switch towards deflation also fits with longer term trends in inflation. We have seen significant price rises since 1900 but history shows that inflation exhibits a clear wave-like pattern and there are often periods of more stable prices.

A century of rising prices: Inflation has rocketed over the past century.
In his latest book, Inflation Matters, he shows that what drives the underlying trend is population growth and competition for resources.
A wave-like form is created when man realises prices are starting to rise again and attempts to exploit the situation. Investors buy assets that will keep their value during the inflation i.e. property/land and shares. They borrow money to invest, knowing that inflation will erode the true value of their capital and repayments. However that borrowed money increases the money supply which then fuels more inflation in the economy. Governments also join in and encourage inflation, as it allows them to spend more and let inflation deal with their deficits.

There comes a point when this inflation gets too far away from the underlying trend or there is a change in the population demand curve, which we starting to see now. Historically some form of deflationary shock occurs when prices collapse by about a half in a space of 5 years or so.
(What does that say for the swings in the value of property, oil stock markets etc in recent years??????)
Thereafter a bounce back follows in prices but they never reach new highs.

Over time prices gradually decline as technology and productivity improvements reduce the costs of production. The technology tipping point and exponential performance increases discussed in a recent blog is going to dramatically impact this – big dats, parallel in memory processing, nano chips, even recently chips made of wood are already here

Is 2015 a turning point for inflation?
What to do? Short-term, governments have a strong incentive to keep inflation growing as long as they can against these demographic headwinds. It helps reduce the value of their escalating debts. To this end, they have and will continue to encourage their central bankers to print money and will keep interest rates low. This will favour assets such as shares and property. On the flipside, all forms of salary, cash savings and bonds will be gradually eroded by the combination of very low yields and the inflation rate that governments manage to create.

However all that will change when we enter the transition period and the inflation trend actually changes. It is impossible to predict exactly what will cause this to happen and when but a likely candidate could well be a bond market crisis.

Transition: Which assets are best as the inflation cycle turns?
At some point the ever increasing level of worldwide government debt will inevitably collapse and with it destroy a large portion of wealth not only in that area but in nearly all financial assets due to domino effects. The reduced the money supply will impact consumer prices, as will lower velocity of money as fear spreads. During this brief turbulent period, the key asset to hold might be gold. Digital currencies may well come to the fore, if they have credibly established themselves by then. Holding cash might also be a good idea, but it is an easy target for governments.
The world will be different after the trauma of the transition. It would return to some form or normality. There may well be some growth in shares and housing, but it may probably be limited to genuine supply and demand effects.

(for example the main return from holding shares will revert to be dividends of maybe 3 per cent. However in a world of average inflation of -1 per cent, that would still be a net return of 4 per cent, not far off historical levels. Therefore investing for the long-term over the coming decades is going to be a challenge, but maybe not an impossible one. In a world of zero inflation business will look as much at cost control and efficiency as to sales growth and technology and systems can be expected to have major impact.

The nature of society , how we communicate what jobs and skills are needed are all going to be impacted much sooner and much more significantly than we may realise.

(Pete Comley’s book Inflation Matters: Inflationary Wave Theory, its impact on inflation past and present … and the deflation yet to come is available in Kindle format and in hardback from Amazon.
Read more: http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/news/article-3038265/Investing-century-deflation-2015-year-100-years-rising-prices-ends-ride-storm.html#ixzz3beAdpfr2 )

Allegion announce a new release of the IF-6020 – version 1.79

June 1st, 2015 by Stephen Jones 1 comment »

The IF-6020 version 1.79 is going was released on May 29, 2015.

In addition to the implementation of features that enhance the performance of the system, note:

IF-6020 version 1.79
1. The number of person record fields is increased. As of version 1.79, it is possible to enter longer remarks in the fields on the new “Info 4” tab in the person record.

2. Visitor management in the WebClient isoptimized. Thus, work processes are more clearly structured and more effective.

3. The number of reports is increased from 100 to 1000.

4. The escalation check is enhanced to include month accounts. . For example, according to a company agreement, only two flexitime days are allowed to be taken per month. If a request is made for three days, a reject message is returned.

5. Support of new technologies: MS SQL Server 2014, Oracle 12g and Windows 8.1 are now also supported.

Known bugs have also been fixed.

Kurzweil and Moore’s law and the IOT – what lies ahead?

May 28th, 2015 by Stephen Jones No comments »

New figures released by the ITU (the UN agency for information and communication technologies) indicates 3.2 billion people online worldwide by the end of 2015 with — 2 billion of them — live in developing countries.
Since the millennium,mobile subscriptions rose from from 738 million to 7 billion worldwide, and Internet penetration from 6.5 percent to 43 percent of the global population. Almost half of the homes across the world now have internet access (46 percent), which is up from 18 percent in 2005.

As for mobile broadband, the number of users surfing on their phones increased by a factor of 12 since 2007, reaching 47 percent this year.
What will the internet of things bring to the party?

ITU Secretary-General Houlin Zhao commented: “These new figures not only show the rapid technological progress made to date, but also help us identify those being left behind in the fast-evolving digital economy, as well as the areas where ICT investment is needed most”.

Brahima Sanou, Director of the ITU’s Telecommunication Development Bureau,observed: “ICTs will play an even more significant role in the post-2015 era and in achieving future Sustainable Development Goals as the world moves faster and faster towards a digital society. Our mission is to connect everyone and to create a truly inclusive information society, for which we need comparable and high-quality data and statistics to measure progress

This explosive growth reflects Google Futurist Ray Kurzweil core thesis, called “the Law of Accelerating Returns .(He made headlines with provocative yet often accurate predictions, like that a computer would beat a human in chess (already happened) or that self-driving cars would take us everywhere (starting to happen). Kurzweil’s theory states that “fundamental measures of information technology follow predictable and exponential trajectories.”
Information technology progresses exponentially. With exponential growth, it’s one, two, four, eight,… and you’re soon at a billion.

The most famous example is “Moore’s Law,” named for Intel cofounder Gordon Moor,who in 1965predicted that “the number of transistors incorporated in a chip will approximately double every 24 months. In 1969 I did metallurgical research on Silicon chip manufacure and 1000 components on a chip was about the limit then and such a chip cost about the same as small car.. Computers have shrunk from filling up a room to filling up your pocket, all while becoming way more powerful.

He cites the analogy of the supposed inventor of chess and his patron, the Emperor of China. In response to the emperor’s offer of a reward for his new beloved game, the inventor asked for a single grain of rice on the first square, two on the second square, four on the third, and so on. The Emperor quickly granted this seemingly benign and humble request. One version of the story has the emperor going bankrupt as the 63 doublings ultimately totaled 18 million trillion grains of rice. At ten grains of rice per square inch, this requires rice fields covering twice the surface area of the Earth, oceans included. Another version of the story has the inventor losing his head. Therein lies the most terrifying, exciting, and mystifying aspect of Kurzweil’s thesis.

From an IT perspective we are somewhere in the middle of that chessboard. When the inventor went through the first half of the chess board, things were fairly uneventful. The inventor was given spoonfuls of rice, then bowls of rice, then barrels. By the end of the first half of the chess board, the inventor had accumulated one large field’s worth (4 billion grains), and the emperor did start to take notice.

When a technology like a a fax, then email, then a smartphone comes in and suddenly shifts our entire culture we start to realize how quickly things are accelerating. Humans are linear by thought process whereas technology is exponential.

“As exponential growth continues to accelerate into the first half of the twenty-first century,” he writes. “It will appear to explode into infinity, at least from the limited and linear perspective of contemporary humans.” The consequences of that moment — which is inevitable if Kurzweil’s theories hold — are widely debated.

Elon Musk has repeatedly said that we should be afraid of these high technologies. He’s said that “with artificial intelligence we’re summoning the demon,” and that it poses the “biggest existential threat to humans.”But for the rest of us, the issue isn’t whether the Law of Accelerating Returns is good or bad. Simply that it exists. “As humans, we are biased to think linearly,” writes Peter Diamandis, the futurist and XPRIZE CEO. “As entrepreneurs, we need to think exponentially.”

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/ray-kurzweil-law-of-accelerating-returns-2015-5#ixzz3bR4CVLMd

SQL 2016 – preview of what’s new

May 28th, 2015 by Stephen Jones No comments »

Three weeks Microsoft Iannounced, the next major release of Microsoft’s flagship SQL database and analytics platform, as well key innovations in the release.
The first public Community Technology Preview (CTP2) for SQL Server 2016 gives an early look into many of the capabilities
SQL Server 2016 provides breakthrough performance for mission critical applications and deeper insights on your data across on-premises and cloud.
Top capabilities for the release include: Always Encrypted – a new capability that protects data at rest and in motion,
Stretch Database – new technology that lets you dynamically stretch your warm and cold transactional data to Microsoft Azure,
enhancements for real-time analytics on top of breakthrough transactional performance and new in-database analytics with R integration.

Key Capabilities in SQL Server 2016 CTP2
Always Encrypted

Always Encrypted, based on technology from Microsoft Research, protects data at rest and in motion. With Always Encrypted, SQL Server can perform operations on encrypted data and best of all, the encryption key resides with the application in the customers trusted environment. Encryption and decryption of data happens transparently inside the application which minimizes the changes that have to be made to existing applications.
Stretch Database
This new technology allows you to dynamically stretch your warm and cold transactional data to Microsoft Azure, so your operational data is always at hand, no matter the size, and you benefit from the low cost of Azure. You can use Always Encrypted with Stretch Database to extend data in a more secure manner for greater peace of mind.
Real-time Operational Analytics & In-Memory OLTP
For In-Memory OLTP, which customers today are using for up to 30x faster transactions, you will now be able to apply this tuned transaction performance technology to a significantly greater number of applications and benefit from increased concurrency. With these enhancements, we introduce the unique capability to use our in-memory columnstore delivering 100X faster queries on top of in-memory OLTP to provide real-time operational analytics while accelerating transaction performance.
Additional capabilities in SQL Server 2016 CTP2 include:
PolyBase – More easily manage relational and non-relational data with the simplicity of T-SQL.
AlwaysOn Enhancements – Achieve even higher availability and performance of your secondaries, with up to 3 synchronous replicas, DTC support and round-robin load balancing of the secondaries.
Row Level Security– Enables customers to control access to data based on the characteristics of the user. Security is implemented inside the database, requiring no modifications to the application.
Dynamic Data Masking – Supports real-time obfuscation of data so data requesters do not get access to unauthorized data. Helps protect sensitive data even when it is not encrypted.
Native JSON support – Allows easy parsing and storing of JSON and exporting relational data to JSON.
Temporal Database support – Tracks historical data changes with temporal database support.
Query Data Store – Acts as a flight data recorder for a database, giving full history of query execution so DBAs can pinpoint expensive/regressed queries and tune query performance.
MDS enhancements – Offer enhanced server management capabilities for Master Data Services.
Enhanced hybrid backup to Azure – Enables faster backups to Microsoft Azure and faster restores to SQL Server in Azure Virtual Machines. Also, you can stage backups on-premises prior to uploading to Azure.

New with SQL Server 2016, customers will have the opportunity to receive more frequent updates to their preview to help accelerate internal development and test efforts. Instead of waiting for CTP3, customers can choose to download periodic updates to CTP2 gaining access to new capabilities and features as soon as they are available for testing.

Social media does it matter to your business?

May 20th, 2015 by Stephen Jones No comments »


Watch this informative video to understand the explosive growth of social media.
Tourism Ireland is the publically-funded organisation responsible for marketing the island of Ireland overseas. Working together with their social media channels, Microsoft Dynamics CRM helps to give the organisation a deeper look at their customers and allows Tourism Ireland to bring a personalised experience to prospective visitors to the Emerald Isle. “Technology allows us to bring a lot of these experiences to life.” Microsoft Dynamics CRM has helped them build a single customer data base that is quickly accessible by their staff allowing them to easily customise their marketing communications.