Epicor is going to court. Whaley Foodservice Repairs of South Carolina is dissatisfied both with Epicor's product and delivery. It wanted a system up and running in its main office and in 12 branch locations... but it never worked. Planned implementation costs of $190,000 now exceed $1 million.
Whaley alleges fraud, breach of contract, unfair trade, and negligent representation. The source of the problem seems to be about what was presented in the demo. Integration and the use of third party software from Evron Computer Systems seemed to be part of the challenge.
Chris Kanaracus on Computerworld provides some reporting.
ERP and other enterprise applications beg for war-like metaphor. Warfare of the early modern era was characterized by the elaborate geometric defenses surrounding towns. The design was intended to create any number of ways of attack and defense. Surrounding this technological thicket, however, was a complete level and treeless area that enabled defenders to view attackers and plan strategy.
Monday, November 14, 2011
First Thoughts
I've had this blog sitting around for a while and I have never figured out a use for it. First of all, what is a terre plein? Basically, it's the flat area around a fort. Military engineers make the ground flat and remove all cover surrounding a fortified location.
I like "terre plein" as a metaphor for enterprise applications: how do we prepare the ground around us to anticipate and prevent challenges. Hence, the theme of this blog.
I like "terre plein" as a metaphor for enterprise applications: how do we prepare the ground around us to anticipate and prevent challenges. Hence, the theme of this blog.
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