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The January 24, 2018 issue of Database Trends and Applications features an article written by Stephanie Simone titled Revelation Software Enriches Riverside Cemetery with Deep Records Management.
Planned in the style of Frederick Law Olmsted’s Central Park, Riverside Cemetery is a 100-acre facility that is more than a century old. Based in Saddlebrook, N.J., the company maintains public records for burials, private records on families, maintains billing, and oversees all the work done to burial plots in addition to taking care of monuments and records relating to them, and other tasks associated with running the business.
The company has a strong focus on customer service and continuously modernizes operations to keep up with changing requirements.
“Most people think a cemetery is two people with shovels, people digging holes and putting caskets in the ground but that’s really not all a cemetery is—there is a lot happening behind the scenes,” said Peter A Blacksberg, president of Riverside Cemetery.
A cemetery is a combination of landscape work, record keeping, financial planning, accounting, and personnel management, as well as additional considerations such as maintenance vehicles, Blacksberg said.
At Riverside, all records are kept permanently and, until 25 years ago, all of it was stored on paper. The 1980s brought dramatic changes to Riverside. Office procedures that had been stranded in the 1950s were replaced by early personal computers for letter writing and record keeping. Standards for each aspect of cemetery maintenance were established, and the field crews were professionally trained in each task.
This technological transition in 1980 was aided by WinWin Solutions, parent company of Revelation Software. Initially using Revelation Software’s DOS-based Advanced Revelation, and then migrating to the Windows-based OpenInsight platform, Riverside has evolved technologically while remaining a traditional cemetery serving the community with warmth, compassion, and professionalism.
And today, Blacksberg believes Revelation’s platform is at the center of an operations-based organization that no one ever sees.
Keeping it Straight With OpenInsight
Riverside Cemetery worked with Mike Ruane, president of WinWin Solutions, to overhaul document storage and maintenance procedures.
Riverside runs its business on OpenInsight, which helps with everything from keeping track of phone calls from funeral directors, to printing and paying the bills, and tracking employee hours.
“Nearly everything is structured through a process control system that we custom designed with WinWin Solutions,” Blacksberg said. The entire work flow process is custombuilt to meet the needs of the cemetery, Blacksberg explained. “We have permanent relationships with families,” Blacksberg said. “That’s one of the many things that make our cemetery really different; we don’t purge the customer list.”
Using the database, the company records conversations with customers and can later pull up that data when customers call. The computer system provides a very rapid and essential first view of what’s going on, according to Blacksberg.
Transitioning Into the Future With Revelation Software
Changing from a paper environment to information automation is complex and not trivial, Blacksberg explained.
At first there was resistance to giving up doing work by hand. After 5–6 years of development and data entry, the cemetery was able to integrate more tools such as document merging, digital photography, and records based digital mapping.
“Each year we process over 2000 work orders on the cemetery grounds. With document merging we were able to print a map of the precise location where the work is to be done. It saves time and limits frustration. We were able to move away from one-off word processor-typed letters to dynamic database merging,” Blacksberg said.
Over time, the company has incorporated more tasks which have enabled them to use the staff in more effective ways.
Deciding on OpenInsight
Before choosing OpenInsight, Blacksberg created a prototype and educated himself on programming software to adjust and add features to the database. Blacksberg was already familiar with different methods, he had worked previously in Silicon Valley.
After being introduced to Revelation’s software, he found the product to be malleable and adaptable to the cemetery’s purposes.
“Even though we’ve used it for 20 years we’re always finding new ways to extract data from the database and the data goes back 100 years even though, obviously, a lot of that had to be keyed in,” Blacksberg said. “We have generations of information to ponder.”
The records expand to thousands of burials and former owners of the property and is all localized.
Solving Problems With Revelation
With the help of Revelation and OpenInsight, recently the company solved an issue with recording employee time cards.
“I wanted to replace our time and attendance swipe card system with our own version of it,” Blacksberg said. Ruane helped him design a custom touchscreen-based interface.
“We built it from scratch and it works online with our database,” Blacksberg said.
Now the staff has a big touchscreen that it uses to clock in for work. “And we have a touchscreen on our office computer.” The solution unifies office and staff hours with the rest of the database, Blacksberg said.
Along with maintaining records, the cemetery offers a landscaping service that sends out between 3,000 and 4,000 invoices annually. This was previously done by hand but is now done by the OpenInsight software. And, noted Blacksberg, the flexibility of the solution allows the company to modify the way it does billing.
“Once those bills go out, the returning payment is keyed back into our operational management system so that work orders that have to be created are based on payment,” Blacksberg said. “We’d have this bottleneck in the days before the computer system and that process took weeks. The computer system we now use takes only 2 hours to create and bills are printed inhouse at a time convenient to our staff.”
The company has been able to continuously develop as the world changes due to Revelation’s help. As other software can become stagnant, OpenInsight continuously updates, Blacksberg noted.
While transitioning into digital photography, Revelation was very instrumental in the process, aiding the company when needed. “We were able to add that feature of attaching a photograph to a record of the gravesite,” Blacksberg said. “Documenting the state of a gravesite, both before and after work is performed on it, gives us tremendous assistance when working with customers.”
While a database failure is a fear, Revelation helps Riverside avoid this threat with its Universal Driver. It has redundancy in the system, and can serve the public reliably and accurately, Blacksberg explained. “Being automated the way it is, is assurance that the company can continue doing its job for the consumer base we have,” Blacksberg said.
Looking Ahead
For the moment, the company is still operating in a Windows-based interface but doesn’t rule out moving to web in the future. And with OpenInsight 10 being released soon, Blacksberg is confident that Riverside will continue to use Revelation Software products for the foreseeable future.
“What makes Revelation Software powerful is that it’s not only a relational database but it’s a MultiValue database,” Blacksberg said. “For us, it’s been a real boon. Its flexibility is exceptionally powerful.”
Any time the company gets an idea they can add it to the existing program without having to rework the entire system. That’s a “powerful” characteristic for the company as it continues to change with the times.
Riverside is considering constructing a CRM platform to help it better analyze its relationship to people who are customers versus individuals who are established family members of the already deceased.
Blacksberg said he’d also like to refine the time and attendance program with the additional ability to deliver web-based payment and streamline the process.
Though Riverside has considered moving elsewhere in the past, instead, it is mulling a decision to upgrade its software with Revelation. Porting to another environment would be expensive and unnecessary, Blacksberg said. “One of the most difficult aspects of information automation is communicating between technology people, programmers, designers, and hardware and software people, and application end users. I would say in my experience in working with computer folks I haven’t met anyone better than the people at Revelation.”
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The June 1, 2017 issue of Database Trends and Applications features an article written by Joyce Wells titled Plumbing Company Modernizes Services with Revelation Software.
New England Water Heater is a plumbing services company specializing in water heater repair and installation based in North Waltham, MA. The company provides a centralized service through a network of geographically dispersed plumbing companies in the surrounding region, including its own company, Home Services of New England (HSNE) Plumbing.
NEWH’s services include the sale, lease, installation, and repair of water heaters for non-commercial customers in the New England states, as well as other plumbing services, ranging from fixing leaking faucets to handling oil-to-gas conversions.
To support this work, the company provides a customer hotline in Massachusetts for more than 20,000 accounts. Revelation Software is the backbone of the overall IT system.
Goal
Today, businesses of all types are changing the way they operate. They are adopting hosted services rather than purchasing and maintaining software and hardware on-premises, and, as a result, employees also now frequently work remotely.
With the advances in IT services that have taken place over the past 5 years, NEWH saw an opportunity to move to a cloud-based system to support its employees and customers. The goal was to improve its overall quality of service while also enabling office staff to access systems from home.
In addition, the company wanted to eliminate the overhead costs of office space, a local area network, and shared printers. Critical to the new set-up was the ability for its affiliated plumbing companies, as well as its own HSNE staff, to input information about service visits and billing into the system and access new assignments while on the road.
Process
In September 2015, NEWH and HSNE decided to eliminate their physical offices, where each employee was provided with a desk, telephone, shared printer, and a desktop computer connected to a local file server to perform their job, said David Harmacek of Harmacek Database Systems, who specializes in Revelation Software products. The process of publishing the company’s 28-year-old Advanced Revelation application to the cloud was handled by Harmacek, who has been a consultant to NEWH since 1994.
When the decision was made to migrate the system, NEWH had a typical Windows Server, internet connections, IP phones for customer support, and a range of website-oriented support interfaces, as well as a hybrid Arev (Advanced Revelation) 32 and OpenInsight 9.4 database system.
To modernize the operations, Harmacek put a plan in motion to switch to a hosted system and began implementing this new approach in February 2016.
The Arev32/OpenInsight system was migrated to a Parallels server. Since the telephones were already on an IP system, no adjustment needed to be made, but office documents and storage outside of the database needed to be moved to Microsoft Office 365 and OneDrive.
As a longtime Revelation Software customer, NEWH uses a system on Revelation’s OpenInsight 9.4 for business processes such as document management, phone calls, and customer support—everything but accounting.
Because the system is so critical to its business—handling processes such as document management, phone calls, and customer support—the NEWH migrated the system to the Parallels 2X RDP server, while also maintaining the physical system, to make sure that everything transitioned flawlessly.
Eventually, even though the company had not yet moved from its physical office space, it began using only the remote services, as if all the employees were working from home, said Harmacek. The dual on-premise and cloud approach lasted until late spring. By June 2016, the company no longer had physical offices, said Harmacek.
Biggest Challenge
“Working with a 28-year-old application, we found that there are many features that are no longer in use, while other capabilities are leveraged all the time and have been just working forever," said Harmacek.
“The biggest challenge was eliminating the dependence on a local network for file storage and local printing, since the employees could no longer walk over to an office and hand someone a piece of paper, and they could no longer print anything,” he said. This issue has been solved by using the feature in Parallels 2X that allows a local folder to be managed from the application. Reports and PDF files can be placed onto the remote desktop. Files, both PDFs and images, can be uploaded and integrated with the hosted database. “Anything that needed to be done had to be accomplished by interacting with the system. I had to find all the places in the processes where this was needed and change the system to allow it to be done that way.”
The Result
The hosted system takes care of everything from managing all the documents that users work with on a regular basis to historical information, including leases, phone calls and customer support.
The system integrates the older Arev interface and the newer OpenInsight interface via the Parallels 2X RDP server to the company's employees, who are now able to do updates, schedule printing of letters, produce emails, and create PDF files on their desktops every day.
The NEWH website also features a customer self-service portal using Revelation’s OpenInsight for Web (O4W), a flexible and powerful web development toolkit for OpenInsight and other MultiValue databases. The system provides the ability to view billing and payment status, download or view recent invoices, make payments via a PayPal interaction, and register and receive their invoices through email instead of by mail, via O4W.
Job assignments are dispatched to vendor plumbers using the system, via text, email, and fax, while jobs routed to HSNE are accessed by its plumbers who constantly log in to the website, where they receive alerts via their tablets to call customers for scheduling. Outside vendors can also upload their invoices and job reports through the website.
The WinWin Solutions, Inc. consultancy, which owns Revelation Software, is the company hosting the revamped web application for NEWH. WinWin specializes in hosting O4W and OpenInsight-based websites, and currently hosts sites for retail systems, financial operations, and product download websites.
“WinWin has a network in which they have been doing this for other customers so I felt very confident moving all of the OpenInsight-based networking to them," said Harmacek. "WinWin also has a network specialist I could discuss upgrades with, and has been very supportive.”
There was a time when Harmacek considered moving from MultiValue to a relational database system such as SQL Server. “But I stuck with this and I am glad I did because OpenInsight is quite a good Windows platform and I am very happy with the things that OpenInsight and MultiValue let us do.”
With OpenInsight 10 coming in the future, Harmacek says that he is looking forward to additional performance improvements. “Over the years, Revelation has been able to interact with the latest technologies,” he noted, adding, “They have been able to keep me from having to become a Windows programmer.”
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The February 14, 2017 issue of Database Trends and Applications features an article written by Stephanie Simone titled ITMS Uses Revelation Software to Stay Ahead of the Curve.
OPTO Software, part of iTMS Software Pty Ltd, provides manufacturing inventory software, including ERP solutions, to a wide variety of industries. Customers span the fields of manufacturing, mining, civil, fabrication, and engineering as well as distribution, retail and wholesale, construction, and importing and exporting.
Based in Brisbane, Australia, Opto has been providing ERP, material requirements planning, manufacturing and inventory software solutions to Australian businesses since the early 1990s, and in turn, these software solutions have enabled smaller manufacturers to close the technological and competitive gap between their business and larger-scale market leaders.
Used by hundreds of clients across Australia, Opto prides itself on being small enough to be highly flexible but large enough to deliver the latest technology trends to its customers while shielding them from the underlying complexity. Providing steadfast support, Opto seeks to guide customers through every phase of their installation, from evaluation and feature selection to technical support and help desk enquiries.
OpenInsight at the Core
“Our focus is on the manufacturing technologies you use to build things. Surrounding that, we also plug into accounting systems,” said Jeremy Bolton, managing director. “Revelation Software’s OpenInsight is the heart of our business; our whole product is based on it.”
According to Bolton, a key differentiator for ITMS/OPTO is its deep understanding of the nuances of manufacturing. Revelation supports that agility, ensuring that OPTO platform is easily configured.
“We’re very good at making software fit into many applications with the ability to deliver it quickly and cost effectively, while also making it easy to understand,” Bolton said. “What sets us apart is the ability for the OPTO platform to be easily configured to precise customer requirements.”
The company’s partnership with Revelation was forged after OPTO’s CEO sought to build an effective and simplified system to solve manufacturing issues.
Ability to Adapt
Revelation has made OPTO’s platform very adaptable. It’s simple to build on and it supports both emerging and existing applications, according to Bolton.
Because it runs on a MultiValue database, OPTO can add new capabilities to its platform without affecting the data model.
“If someone needs something with Revelation, the architecture of our product enables us to add the new capability without changing the underlying data model of every other customer,” Bolton said. “Our software can fit in many applications.”
MultiValue database technology can be quickly tailored to unusual requirements and it can talk directly to the CRM copy machine, Bolton explained.
“When we are talking to people about layout, normally we have to get spreadsheet, but this technology allows us to do a layout quickly and effectively,” Bolton said. “Revelation gives us the flexibility we need when responding to customer requirements.”
Built for the Future
Reliability and compatibility are also why OPTO has stayed with Revelation for more than 20 years.
The technology helps OPTO support its customers by providing them with a platform that delivers better customer outcomes, quickly, and cost-effectively.
The MultiValue aspect of the platform make it possible to process requests from customers quickly and with a speed that relational database management systems can’t provide, according to Bolton.
“Running Microsoft SQL Server or Oracle didn’t make any sense,” Bolton said. “There is nothing else you can find to handle so much data.”
Additionally, the cost to customize the platform for a customer was “astronomical,” whereas using Revelation makes the platform cost-effective for the client, Bolton explained.
However, if customers do need to utilize relational database management software, the OPTO platform can integrate to any part of the database that’s necessary, he noted.
Innovation with Revelation
Recently, ITMS/OPTO and Revelation collaborated on adding RESTful application programming interfaces (APIs) to ITMS/OPTO’s platform. The new capability allows the company to plug into modern web platforms such as Salesforce.
Moreover, the use of RESTful APIs means that ITMS/OPTO doesn’t have to do heavy manually coding to add capabilities as it did before, Bolton explained. Using RESTful APIs will enable integration with the increasing number of best-in-class cloud-based, mobile, and niche applications.
“Before, if we needed a CRM system, we’d have to ‘be’ the CRM system,” Bolton said. “Now, we can just plug into the world’s best CRM system.”
This has been a key step in the right direction as OPTO looks to integrate more web-based products, and to allow third parties to connect into its systems.
Opto gets requirements from customers and can build what they need, but in the past, Opto would be constrained, said Bolton. “What we want to do is make it so that any third party can pick it up and do an order.”
The company already utilizes integration in the cloud effortlessly, according to Bolton.
“Integration in the cloud becomes much easier, that’s one of the big benefits you get from RESTful APIs,” Bolton said. “Cloud-to-cloud products integrate almost seamlessly. From a customer’s point of view, the backups just get done.”
Previously, the company experimented with OpenInsight for Web (O4W), a user friendly web development environment that allowed the company to run its platform on a handheld device. Though it worked well, the company eventually needed a heavier mobile development environment and implemented a third-party connector, moving toward Revelation’s RESTful API tools.
Looking Ahead to the Future
The feedback from ITMS customers for over nearly 20 years has uniformly excellent, according to Bolton.
“Some may actually know that Revelation’s OpenInsight is platform the underlying our product, but many do not know, and this is in fact a benefit as the platform is transparent to the customer so they can focus on the business outcomes,” Bolton said.
As the manufacturing business changes, Bolton says Revelation continues to help his company stay ahead of the curve.
“There’s a complexity that we solve that very few other organizations can,” Bolton said. “Revelation helps us do that in agile manner.”
According to Bolton, Revelation also continues to deliver enhancements to OpenInsight in each release that keep the platform relevant and up to date.
“There are a series of features that are coming in the next release with OpenInsight 10 that we believe we will be able to use in continuing to deliver successful business outcomes to our customers,” Bolton said
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The September 19, 2016 issue of Database Trends and Applications features an article written by Stephanie Simone titled Furniture Retail Operations Group Uses Revelation to Help Power its Business.
The Furniture Retail Operations Group (FROG) provides innovative, yet easy to use IT solutions for furniture and appliance stores. Its mission is to create reliable and cost-effective methods that allow home furnishings retailers to operate more efficiently.
The company’s KISS system is a fully integrated point-of-sale solution for Windows built by experts in furniture operations to make companies more efficient in how they operate. In order to get the most out of this system, fix problems, and create new solutions and projects, FROG uses Revelation Software’s OpenInsight solution.
The OpenInsight Windows application is a big part of FROG’s ability to run its business, according to David Hatcher, director of software services at FROG. Keeping the system running 24/7 to support customers means FROG needs a foundation that’s reliable and Revelation delivers that.
Choosing OpenInsight
“OpenInsight is what handles the data,” Hatcher said. “The nice thing is that it has a CGI (common gateway interface) for web-based data handling. An OpenInsight windows interface takes the same data from the internet, from an app, from a browser or from within the built-in Windows application all at same time, in real time. From any device, we can get into the system to manipulate data, keep track of customers, and do what need to do to keep business going.”
FROG’s data management system was created in the late 1980s on PICK mini-computers and Revelation technology helped the company move from that platform to the first DOS-based system.
“We’ve been able to maintain same data structure through those decades. Some code from the old Pick system was even ported to the DOS system and then later to Windows,” Hatcher said. “The data control on even the new capabilities we develop often has 25 years of testing behind it so we don’t have many of the problems that can come up with new development using a new system.”
The ability to keep the environment stable while having the flexibility to evolve and change has been a key reason why FROG continues to utilize Revelation’s systems, he said.
Evolving with Revelation
In addition to using OpenInsight at the back end for many years, FROG more recently began using O4W (OpenInsight for Web) in its web applications.
“Most of our new development is on O4W,” he said. “As we move more and more of the system to apps, eventually our system will eventually be 100% application-on-cloud and we’ll have no need for Windows anymore.”
The latest initiative FROG has underway involves OpenInsight and Google geocoding and tracking to route and monitor trucks, according to Hatcher. “It has heat maps of where our customers are for ad purposes and we can see anything we want to know about customers through these maps which are linked into apps suite.”
Meeting New Goals
By working with Revelation, FROG has been able to shift technologically into anything, anywhere, Hatcher explained. “The advancements with CGI and Revelation’s O4W keep data flowing out to the latest and greatest apps and that’s been extremely useful.”
Revelation is always ahead of the curve, keeping up with latest trends and sensing where the market is going, he noted. “They react to new capabilities the technology sector is developing but also knows what to retain so we can keep the same database and stay on the leading edge,” Hatcher said.
'The advancements with CGI and Revelation’s O4W keep data flowing out to the latest and greatest apps and that’s been extremely useful.’
Because of Revelation’s innovations and foresight it has never made sense to switch to another provider, he said. Revelation’s ability to stay with the same data structure, move through several transitional kinds of interfaces, and ability to provide constant upgrades, has made it easier on FROG to keep its system going.
“We didn’t have to rewrite for all the changes,” Hatcher said. “The ability to transition has been greatly simplified by keeping data separate from the user interface as technology changes.”
What’s Ahead
Preparing for the future, FROG is in the process of enhancing its database to make sure it runs faster, and apps perform reliably and smoothly as the company runs into more internet networking situations, Hatcher explained. The plan is to be able to offer its services exclusively through apps in the cloud.
“Building apps for the system was a big step forward and we’re looking forward to having the ability to go into back end with a new engine Revelation is working on,” Hatcher said.
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The January 7, 2016 issue of Database Trends and Applications features an article written by Joyce Wells titled National Software Systems Creates Customized Path to Success with Revelation Software.
As a leading IT consulting firm, National Software Systems provides a range of individualized business solutions, including custom software and database development, business network installation and support, and IT consulting services.
For more than 15 years, National Software Systems has been a Revelation Software solution provider. During that time, National Software Systems has developed many software packages individually suited to particular customer requirements.
The array of business types using National Software Systems’ services is wide-ranging. The company has provided a large manufacturer of stuffed animals with the software it needed to track its business and manufacturing processes, a police department with an add-on module for maintaining a list of homeowners whose alarm systems were being monitored, a commercial debt recovery company with software to maintain a CRM-type list of debtors as well as potential clients, and a sheet metal manufacturer of sheet metal packaging with custom software for its business processes.
The common thread among these organizations is that they have all invested time and money over years to create the exact software products they need to run their businesses smoothly. Revelation Software products are at the core of these companies’ systems and they rely on National Software Systems in partnership with Revelation to keep pace with their changing needs and modern market requirements.
As a result of its breadth of experience handling the disparate software requirements of many types of businesses, National Software Systems has become expert in providing individualized capabilities.
“We have particularly focused on manufacturing software and we have a base set of modules that we offer to customers and then adapt them to their specific needs so they become highly customized solutions,” said John Bouley, president of National Software Systems.
Many of the applications that National Software Systems has developed with OpenInsight are highly customized to do exactly what a business needs.
National Software Systems has built up a suite of software products that can be customized to meet specific needs, including solutions for inventory control, order entry, purchase orders, and accounts receivable. “That is the difference between purchasing an off-the-shelf piece of software where you take what the software manufacturer offers and adapt your business processes to it, as opposed to creating a custom solution,” explained Bouley, who in addition to his MultiValue expertise is also a Microsoft Certified Professional (MCP) and Microsoft Small Business Specialist (MSBS). The customized approach allows customers to design what they need and have them grow and change as their business grows and changes, he noted.
Bouley originally joined the company right out of college in 1985 and started working with Revelation Software in the late 1980s when the Revelation Release G was released for PCs, later moving on to Advanced Revelation.
A critical juncture arrived when Revelation came out with the first release of its MultiValue/NoSQL database development suite OpenInsight and Bouley considered alternative platforms. According to Bouley, the release was not viable from a developer standpoint. “It just didn’t make any sense to go from DOS to 16-bit Windows,” said Bouley. Ultimately, Bouley stayed with Revelation. When the 7.2 release of OpenInsight with a 32-bit implementation came out, “that is when it really came together” and customers who were on Advanced Revelation embraced a move to OpenInsight, he said.
In fact, so strong is the commitment to their existing product suites that some of National Software Systems' customers are still on Advanced Revelation, says Bouley. They use Arev32, an interface contained within OpenInsight that allows users and developers to run and create Advanced Revelation applications in a console application powered by OpenInsight. It allows developers to have the best of both worlds (OpenInsight and Advanced Revelation). With Arev32, Bouley says, the software looks like it is running AREV but it is not, and that has allowed some customers to continue to use their legacy applications but run them on modern operating systems such as Windows 7.
The flexibility offered by Revelation is one of the key reasons that National Software Systems and its customers have steadfastly remained with Revelation over the course of years. In fact, National Software Systems has had customers that were told to migrate to other platforms following acquisitions and have refused, said Bouley. One manufacturing plant was given a mandate to move to a parent company’s relational database system, but years later is still running its software with OpenInsight because software on the relational database management system could not do what was needed. “Even from an end user standpoint, there is fierce loyalty to Revelation,” said Bouley.
‘Even from an end user standpoint, there is fierce loyalty to Revelation.’
And, along the way, Revelation has changed and added features to OpenInsight to evolve with all the key software trends and address new requirements. One key addition, according to Bouley, has been OpenInsight for Web (O4W), which allows developers to produce a dynamic web-based application and still have almost all of the code be RBasic.
Many of the applications that National Software Systems has developed have been in use for years, and are highly customized to do exactly what a business needs, and so there is an interest in not making dramatic changes that may introduce unnecessary risk, he noted.
With the upcoming release of OpenInsight 10, the new features Bouley is anticipating most are the ability to create more modern-looking applications, new support for languages such as JavaScript which will help expand the platform to more developers, and support for a 64-bit development environment. The new release is expected to be generally available later in 2016, but, said Bouley, “I wish it were sooner.”
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