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Conceptually it is a great tool, but are there really any big commercial companies that use infopath ? I have seen a couple of case studies but not found any useful lists that describe big commercial ventures that use Infopath in a significant way.
Likely those adopting InfoPath are into it for its SharePoint integration.
See Microsoft's InfoPath case studies.
Del Monte Foods
Energizer
Bank of America
Colorado Bureau of Investigation
Grant Thornton LLP
Tampa Police Department
Microsoft Global Security
Kingdom of Jordan Water Ministry
I did developed and deployed into production several large applications using InfoPath. It's a nice platform to develop and very easy to extract information, even more when used with Sharepoint and/or Forms Services.
Main concern about this tool is related to licensing costs.
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I am a dot web developer and recently I got an offer for CRM technical consultant from a company so I'm confused about that should I accept that offer or proceed with my recent field. so I need expert opinion from all you ?
Which filed is best Dynamic CRM or hardcore Dot net Web developer ?
Need expert opinion.
Please provide a reason too.
Thanks in advance .
As a Dynamics CRM developer you can be a web, backend, database, enterprise and/or report developer. All in the middle of the Microsoft product/technology portfolio (SQL Server, SharePoint, Office, Azure and Visual Studio/.Net to name a few).
It's a fast moving area and you will likely be working with the newest technology.
Generally speaking, in our business it's a wise decision to specialize. Finding good web developers can be a challenge, finding good Dynamics CRM developers is even harder. Logical consequence is that the market value of CRM developers is better.
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I have a BizSparks subscription to Windows Azure, I have created a website and deployed my MVC 4 app. All went well, the site running under : http://rfi-uat.azurewebsites.net/
Now, I am trying to set the CName and point my domain name to the site. I read and understood that in order to do this, I need to change the site mode from FREE to Shared. However, every time I try it says
Mode change could not be saved
The detail of the message reads
Please try again. If the problem persists, contact support.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
It appeared to be an issue for certain websites. In particular websites in East Asia region. I first lodged a ticket to the billing support as advised by #David M. above. The Win Azure team responded:
Your question appears to require technical support for
instead of billing and subscription support for Azure as selected.
Then I kept trying differnt things, and I found that few other operations fail occasionally on that particular website (which is the only one in East Asia region in my account).
I created a new Azure website in East US region and everything went smooth from there on.
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I have an engineering firm and our website was built using Visual Studio 2010 / asp.net 4.0 / VB. Recently, a client (GM) requested that we have a knowledge base where they can input their questions, and we can answer 'em. Kind of like a FAQ, or a Lessons Learned type of thing. But it'll require that they'll be able to log in and ask their own questions.
For instance: Q: How would I incorporate multiple machine vision systems into a bead detection application?
A: You would need to use a software such as PPT and have multiple fixtures in order to assimilate the cameras accordingly.
I'm terrible at databases; I can basically run an SQL query, and that's about it! lol. And I'm not a programmer by trade. Can I do this without a database? Can anyone guide me in the right direction here? I mean, is there something out there that's open-source, or at least something that's easy to implement?
Any guidance in this regard would be greatly greatly appreciated! Thanks!
Just install a Wiki.
There are plenty of different ones out there - some written in .NET lanaguages.
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Is Oracle Business Intelligence, v. 11.1.1.5.0 free to install? What are the system requirements for installing?
In the most recent price list, Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition Plus is $2000 per Named User or $300,000 per Processor at retail (though most people don't pay retail). If your intended use falls under the terms of the OTN license, you should be able to download the software from the Oracle Technology Network and install it. But you'd have to determine whether the OTN license's terms were sufficient for you or whether you needed a proper license.
As for the system requirements, you'll want to review the documentation on the installation scenarios because it will depend on how many machines you are using and where all the components are being installed. If you are asking about installing the entire stack on a single machine, it had better be a very powerful machine. I couldn't imagine installing on a box with less than 4 GB of RAM and I'd want at least 8 GB before even thinking about it.
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I have to survey this topic but I can't find useful articles which are academic. Also, I have to answer this question - what are the standards and format of rss feeds?
thanks
I see the relationship between collaboration frameworks and RSS feeds as follow: collaboration frameworks provide support to rss feeds as a way to communicate (export) updates of something or to import communication from other systems. Here is a list of three academic papers somehow related to collaboration frameworks or the use of rss feeds to create systems.
Florian Rosenberg, Francisco Curbera, Matthew J. Duftler, Rania Khalaf, "Composing RESTful Services and Collaborative Workflows: A Lightweight Approach," IEEE Internet Computing, pp. 24-31, September/October, 2008
Evaluating Web 2.0 Services Based on 7C Framework
A Framework for Flexible User Profile Mashups
The answer for you last question you can find in this link: RSS specification.