Tuesday 30 October 2018

NetSuite Tutorial

This tutorial gives you an overview and talks about the fundamentals of NetSuite.

What is NetSuite and it’s OneWorld

NetSuite originally began as NetLedger in the late 1990s. Since its founding, the company and its software have undergone a number of changes. Today, NetSuite offers essentially three software services:NetSuite CRM+, NetSuite, and OneWorld.
The NetSuite product includes much of the functionality offered in OneWorld, but is meant for organizations with only a single legal entity. Clearly, the NetSuite product targets the upper end of the small business market. It’s specially suited to small businesses that forecast rapid near and long-term growth.
Are you intereted in taking up for NetSuite Course? Enroll for Free Demo on NetSuite Training
Among the early adopters of NetSuite were companies in wholesale distribution, e-commerce, software, and software services. Also, companies with hybrid or non-mainstream business models often found NetSuite’s highly configurable software very attractive. Geographically dispersed organizations also found NetSuite to be an excellent solution, as it allowed access to remote users while avoiding costly infrastructure. Vendors, customers, partners, and especially employees could log in from anywhere at any time to do business in the same NetSuite account. NetSuite’s cost-effective and accessible software effectively leverages the Internet, which is now the most dominant feature of our business landscape.
The theme of offering an integrated end-to-end solution to modern business challenges continued with NetSuite OneWorld. With OneWorld, rolled out in late 2007, you could operate not only from any location in the world, but also through multiple legal subsidiaries, in multiple currencies and languages. OneWorld is therefore, in the simplest terms, a business management software solution for small and medium enterprises operating in a global economy that the Internet has changed forever.
We often field questions about the difference between NetSuite’s main software suites, so it probably makes sense to look at them in a little more detail and make sure the differences and similarities are well understood.

Friday 26 October 2018

Jenkins Installation on Windows

Introduction:

In this article, we will see what Jenkins software tool is all about and also look in to its installation process on a Windows based machine. Firstly let us understand what Jenkins is all about and why / where this software tool can be put to use?
Jenkins is a very powerful automation platform that makes it relatively easy to automate the build process (through ANT), regression testing and also the integration. There are quite a few reasons why you would want to do this, as mentioned below:
1) It helps the developer’s time being focused on things that matter. With newer code blocks added to the same functionality, your developer doesn’t need to worry further on testing it as running regression tests with Jenkins is pretty simple. This means that developer time is not compromised with something that is not required.
2) It helps in the improvement of software quality. With Continuous integration, identifying issues caused by newer check-ins can be identified and resolved earlier than being reported at a later stage of design and development.
3) It ensures faster development, as the likelihood of any integrations issues are lesser and also the whole part of integration is also automated.
Enhance your IT skills and proficiency by taking up the Jenkins Training.

Jenkins Installation on Windows

Advantages of Jenkins:

1) The points mentioned above are good enough reasons for someone not using Jenkins in their development ecosystem to use it, but let us take a look in to its advantages further to cement its requirement:
2) Jenkins is tool that is available open source with strong community support.
3) Jenkins installation is much easier.
4) Jenkins has a surplus of 1000 and counting plug-in’s support.
5) Jenkins provides a provision to create a new Jenkins plugin if one is not available.
6) Jenkins is written in Java, hence its easier portability on almost all the major platforms.

Thursday 25 October 2018

Blue Prism Architecture

Introduction

Automation technology is widely blooming in the present time. There is nothing wrong to say that its automation that is shaping the future businesses and is eliminating some of the major problems for them. Currently, almost all large-scale enterprises are investing in the Robotic Automation and they are deriving equal benefits for the same. One of the prime aims of Automation is to simply enable organizations to get the best out of a business by automating different processes and activities. It is very much true that Blue Prism Automation technology is quite promising in this. Since a few recent years, Blue Prism has come up with tools having excellent automating features in them. When it comes to getting the best out of Blue Prism Automation, it is necessary to study its architecture. This simply let developers and business Analytics get the most favorable outcome in the shortest time possible. Here is all that you should know about Blue Prism Architecture. 

Product Architecture

The current and the latest version of Blue Prism is v4.2 and the same is widely used by a very large number of organizations in different parts of the world. You might have no idea but it has been equipped with automation features that were only an imagination s a few years ago. This version of Blue Prism is simply available in two configurations and they are:
1. Self Hosted
2. Cloud
In the self-hosted approach, there remains centralized server architecture and the same has a lot of useful components that can simply be trusted when it comes to supporting the Automation at an enterprise implementation. The cloud technology on the other hand, is totally different and all the tasks that are concerned are already defined in the same. The users are not generally allowed to made changes in them on a large scale.

Software elements in the Blue Prism configuration

There are total 4 elements software that are present for this approach and they are:
1. Process Studio
2. Object Studio
3. Release Manager
4. Control Room

Process Studio

Process Studio is very useful when it comes to enabling the businesses to come up with the best process. Through this, the building, designing, testing, as well as editing of the processes in the Blue Prism can simply be considered. Generally, the processes are made to be reused from the concerned objects.
1. First of all, a library of business objects is simply contrasted in this approach. 
2. Next is to simply putting the actions in a  defined sequence and they are then controlled in the hierarchy present in the Process Layer
3. In Process studio, it is possible to put the control loops, business logics as well as object calls in a defined sequence and they can be tested simply in a flow which is visible to the users all the time.
Most of the processes in the Blue Prism are very much similar to that of procedures of the software. It is possible to call the object anytime and they can then be processed. The main aim is to come with the useful business applications and automating them under some defined rules of automation. Thus, it is possible to create processes which are dynamic, re-usable, and flexible. Now the processes are configured through some valid business logics and the desired outcome can simply be assured in no time.