January 20, 2015
It’s only natural that legacy Clarify deployments are often supported by outdated or soon to be outdated versions of operating systems and databases. More and more we’re contacted by clients exhibiting a slight tone of panic in their voices because the database and/or operating system their Clarify CRM software is residing on is soon to be unsupported, leaving them with more questions than answers. Will our customizations break? Will our event rules still fire properly? Will our Outlook version interact properly with legacy Clarify tools after an upgrade? What the heck are we going to do if something mission critical breaks? What if our auto-generated customer emails cease to work? Can you even imagine the increased workload to our support center staff if they have to individually email a follow up to each customer? Have we waited too long…
Clarify Infrastructure Upgrades Continue to Grow in Popularity
January 20, 2015
It’s only natural that legacy Clarify deployments are often supported by outdated or soon to be outdated versions of operating systems and databases. More and more we’re contacted by clients exhibiting a slight tone of panic in their voices because the database and/or operating system their Clarify CRM software is residing on is soon to be unsupported, leaving them with more questions than answers. Will our customizations break? Will our event rules still fire properly? Will our Outlook version interact properly with legacy Clarify tools after an upgrade? What the heck are we going to do if something mission critical breaks? What if our auto-generated customer emails cease to work? Can you even imagine the increased workload to our support center staff if they have to individually email a follow up to each customer? Have we waited too long…
October 27, 2014
Back in 2010 I created a wiki for sharing Rulemanager knowledge that went along with some Rulemanager and Business Rule webinars that I was doing. At the time, wikispaces was a great place to host a free wiki. They recently announced that they are no longer offering a free wiki option. So, I’ve moved my rulemanager wiki to Github. You can now find it at https://github.com/gsherman/rulemanager/wiki Github I really dig Github for being able to share and collaborate on projects. We use it internally for hosting our codebases, we use Github Issues for issue tracking, we use their wiki features, and gists for sharing code snippets. In their own words: “GitHub is the best place to share code with friends, co-workers, classmates, and complete strangers.” I agree. What else do we share on Github? Tons of stuff! Bolt – a…