Microsoft Eyes PeopleSoft Customers 266
An anonymous reader writes "According to a couple articles, Microsoft has announced an intent to pick up some of the PeopleSoft customers currently fleeing from possible support contract increases and an uncertain future. What does it mean for the landscape of the ERP market if Microsoft starts being more competitive with its Axapta product?"
It's because... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's because... (Score:3, Funny)
Do you realize the irony of your comment?
Re:It's because... (Score:2)
Stor
PeopleSoft customers... (Score:5, Funny)
Umm, yeah! (Score:5, Funny)
the difference, don't buy FUD. (Score:3, Insightful)
Few other companies care to use FUD marketing of the sort Microsoft is the master of. Novel may indeed want Red Hat customers, but they are not going to make an announcement of Red Hat's impending doom that will be echoed by an unbelievable chorus of PC pulp pushers and pundits with Dido qualifications. The uncertainty here is about as manufactured as IBM's supposed abandonment
OT: Re:the difference, don't buy FUD. (Score:2)
hidden clause? (Score:5, Funny)
"at any point we could be bought out by microsoft and your customer service could cease to exsist."
that'll learn all you blind-accept-button-pushers
Re:hidden clause? (Score:2)
Actually, when I saw the headline for this article I thought of the scene where Mr. Anderson receives the phone from the FedEx guy and Morpheus gives him a call. Obviously, on the other end is Gates or perhaps Ballmer using the Microsoft Windows Speech Enhancer to disguise his voice.
"Customer Service...do you want to know what it is?"
Microsoft? ERP? (Score:5, Insightful)
One presumes MS know what they're doing, but this is certainly a weird gambit.
Re:Microsoft? ERP? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Microsoft? ERP? (Score:2)
VB3! IT WAS WRITTEN IN VB3 FFS!!!!
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft? ERP? (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft? ERP? (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft? ERP? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Microsoft? ERP? (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft? ERP? (Score:2)
You'd think that since small business are small, their requirements for ERP software wouldn't be that difficu
Re:Microsoft? ERP? (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft? ERP? (Score:2)
It seems to me that as a consulting firm, you must be able to generate more money than e.g. a transport company.
I worked in a transport company with 20 people, and I did the IT, which was based upon a minicomputer with a relational database and a rapid application development, with programming in COBOL.
It seems they started out with a custom built solution, done by an external company, and delivered completely with sources, so that the local IT responsible could update and add applications.
It seems that
Re:Microsoft? ERP? (Score:2)
You hit the nail right on the head. This is why there is such a huge trend to use standard software. Custom code just leads to headaches, even when done in house and is why so many people have headaches when they upgrade their ERP systems.
Re:Microsoft? ERP? (Score:2)
competition is good, usually (Score:3, Interesting)
However, based on MS's past behaviours, I think we can look forward to a "good enough" replacement for PeopleSoft to be built into the next version of Windows. MS will forbid OEM's to remove it because they don't want a "confusing user experience." Oh, and it will increase the "Microsoft tax" on your new PC that you were only going to load Linux on.
Don't get me wrong - I like competition, but I like fair competition, based on merits. It reminds me of my high-school football team; the football was some sort of "regulation size and colour," and so the high school chose its school colours such that one of them matched the ball colour perfectly. When we played home games, we got to pick whether we would wear the light or the dark-coloured jerseys, and of course, we chose the ones that matched the ball. It made it very difficult for the other players to tell who had the ball, and made diversionary fakes a lot easier. When we played away, our opponents would choose the dark colour, so that our team wore the light (and very contrasting) colour jerseys. Net result? We won a lot more home games, and by higher margins. Hardly what I'd call "fair."
Mod this -1, Long-winded.
-paul
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:5, Insightful)
You have no idea what business PeopleSoft is in do you?
PeopleSoft makes Enterprise Resource Planning [peoplesoft.com] software. Microsoft has very little to compete in this segment of business. The big king here is SAP [sap.com], the German ERP software maker that has 29% of the market. Oracle has bought PeopleSoft [oracle.com] after 18 months of intense and hostile negotiation. Microsoft is eyeing PeopleSoft customers for it's Microsoft Business Solutions [microsoft.com] productline - which is hardly competition in near future.
You need urgently an injection of iorn. (Score:2)
Iron. (Score:2)
Iron.
Iron.
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:4, Insightful)
The MS CRM offering doesn't come close to PeopleSoft or SAP. I am a senior programmer for a fortune 500 with 140,000 employees. We recently finished a _very_ long deployment of PeopleSoft HR and PeopleSoft Portal. We looked at what MS had to offer and it didn't even come close. We looked at SAP and we looked at Oracle. All of our mission critical data is in Oracle and the not-to-important-data is in SQL Server or a few MySQL databases. We were actually leaning toward Oracle's product (because we use it as our critical DB), however they didn't have a few _very_ important functionalities that we need for our HR processes, so that left PeopleSoft and SAP.
Converting your whole HR/payroll process (especially when you pay 140,000+ employees every week) to any other system takes a ton of time and a ton of cash. We spent tens of millions on these two systems. There is no way in the world we would redo everything in an MS product.
Our systems are running great. We are about 2 versions behind on the latest PeopleSoft releases. We will probably just upgrade to the last PeopleSoft release and leave it alone. Every upgrade costs tons of money and time.
There is also the fact that were I work, all of our financial data and warehouse is _only_ in Oracle. Will the MS product allow you to work with a non-SQL Server DB (I doubt it)? There is no chance in H-E-L-L that we would take our critical data out of Oracle and put it in MS SQL Server. Then there is the issue of what technology MS built their system on. It has been out for a while, so I will assume it is in old ASP? No thank, we don't want that crap on our network. Java or ASP.Net/C# only please.
Re:What did Peoplesoft lack? (Score:2)
The enterprise version of Oracle is expensive so we use other DB's for less important data. I don't make the purchasing choices. I personally don't know why we only use the Enterprise version Oracle. Oracle offers a standard version that, last time I checked, was a little less then MS' standard version of
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:4, Insightful)
Uh, oh! Surprise, it works! It even has it's own little icon (of course it's a brown little turd compared to the shiny white iPod icon)!
Poor thing, it asks me to sync all my library with the MuVo (it won't fit dear!) So I manage the playlists manually... and it works! Sheesh, would you believe it? Out of the box, no drivers, no frills... just the Apple experience, with the competition's hardware.
Oh, it can't play m4a and m4p... but, hey! the MuVo doesn't support it in the first place... should Apple flash it (if it were possible) on the fly to give it a chance against the iPod?
In any case, wasn't the iTMS a device to increase iPod sales? So tell me, why is iTunes integration working so well with competing hardware? Come on, I'm listening... can't hear you...
[... silence
You see... the iPod is simply unbeatable... it just works, Apple doesn't need sleazy tactics to help the bottom line. It floats on its own.
About Google... well, you can use askjeeves... or altavista... why aren't you? Perhaps because they don't hold a candle against almighty google? Thought so...
M$ on the other hand KILLED BeOS (amongst other things)
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:3, Insightful)
You see... the iPod is simply unbeatable... it just works
Unless you want it to "work" for more than a few hours, or "work" with an OS other than Win/Mac, or "work" with additional music formats like OGG or FLAC, or "wo
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:2)
Just a nit, but industrial design (which Apple have always been good at) is a technical issue. The fact that Apple has understood that has helped them to be profitable.
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:2)
I just copied my new Silverchair album from my Linux PC to my iPod mini using gtkpod. It works fine, your point is not valid.
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:2)
Apple does not own AAC. Fraunhofer (IIRC) owns that. It is just the next generation of mp3, by virtue of being an accepted compressed audio in MPEG-4.
Apple has nothing to gain by pushing the format.
Why did they not include Ogg Vorbis or FLAC? I do not know. I suppose their contracs may prohibit those formats for some reason. Or perhaps they are dumb, or there is a technical limitation which they could not solve (meaning they are either cheap or dumb).
In either case -- that is
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:2)
Having a monopoly (and iTMS does have a pretty near monopoly on legal music downloads) changes the rules, as Microsoft have found out. Much of what MS have run in to trouble over would be perfectly fine, IF they weren't so dominant.
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:4, Interesting)
I invested in Be Inc., and I've learned my lesson from the experience. Never invest in a company run by a crazy Frenchman like Jean-Louis Gassée.
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:2)
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:2)
Kind of a shame -- any shop that tosses old CRT monitors off the roof of their building looked like a fun place to work.
Chip H.
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:5, Insightful)
First Microsoft vs. Apple Ipod. The I Pod is a Music Player. Although Nice to have it is not a necessity to most peoples everyday life. While Microsoft windows has became more of an infrastructure to daily life for home and business it is much like the telephone system now. People need to write papers and more accept the
Microsoft vs. Google. Windows Cost money to legally operate, Word costs money. Google is a free service. If a better services comes along people would switch. It is also a thing that we are not forced to use google at most work places. You are free to go to yahoo or others.
In some ways you are right the reason is that Apple and Google haven't been sued for antitrust suits yet. But the reason is that they haven't been sued is because they haven't broken any anti-trust laws. Having 90% market share alone doesn't make you a monopoly. Having 90% market share and actively stopping consumers from switching is.
Think of this senerio...
GM has 90% of the market share of cars. But the other 10% are using other consumers. Ok GM is just a popular car. But if they switched to Ford they will still be able to ride the same roads fill at the same gas station.
But if GM was like Microsoft, The majority of the infrastructure roads, gas stations will only work for GM cars, And if the competitor made there vehecials compatible they will get sued out of business because of 1 GMs size and 2 they own the rights on all the specs so making a copy will break patented etc.
So the other cars will end up more expensive to run because they are forced to drive around the GM infrastructure.
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:2)
to automobiles (and GM) are right on target,
for a different reason.
Electric and solar powered vehicles will never
make it into the mainstream USA auto market
because the corporate control over the energy
source(s) would be weakened. That is the reason
why hydrogen powered vehicles are being touted --
and foolishly at that. The hydrogen fuel cell
is a lock-in to the current and evolving energy
distribution system, but will be extracting
most of that hydrogen gas from hydr
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:2)
They are a monopoly. (Score:2)
Google does have a monopoly on web searches, and Apple has a monopoly on HD based music players. There is nothing illegal or immoral about it. However if you have a monopoly it is illegal and immoral to do some things that would otherwise be normal competition.
Thus Apple perhaps should be forced to open up their iTunes music format to anyone. (though this is dependant on keeping the monopoly, since HD based music players are easy to make it is questionable if they can keep it in the long run)
I can't
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:2)
Not if said person buys a Mac. :-)
Oh wait, are you saying that my Mac isn't a PC? Would that be PC as in personal computer or PC as in politically correct? Either way, I'd venture to say that any Mac is much more personal and correct than anything Intel or AMD can put out.Re:competition is good, usually (Score:2)
If the macs had a majority of the desktops at this point, the iTMS would become a monopoly.
iPods high marketshare does not indicate a monopoly of itself, since nothing is pushing its use. However if apple used iPods dominance to push another market, it may find itself in deep water.
Has nothing to do with the ease of avoidance. It has all to do with amount of market influence. A product influencing its own market is fine. A prodict influencing another market is us
Re:competition is good, usually (Score:3, Funny)
You misspelled "trivial". HTH.
Choose open source ERP (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Choose open source ERP (Score:4, Informative)
One reason is that until very recently you needed Oracle DB to run Compiere. There is a slew of new FOOS DB's in the works for Compiere most interesting it Fyracle [janus-software.com]the Oracle Mode Firebird
Re:Choose open source ERP (Score:5, Insightful)
If my ERP breaks, I don't have time to read mailing lists and ask in IRC channels for somebody to help me write a patch. I want a butt connected with my boot, preferably somebody senior representing the vendor, and then I want a fix available in a time which meets my SLA.
Anything less is unacceptable.
Re:Choose open source ERP (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Choose open source ERP (Score:2)
Duh. That's why you hire consultatnts. So you have someone to blame. And sue.
Re:Choose open source ERP (Score:5, Insightful)
Never ceases to amaze me how many folks want commercial grade support, for open source products, but, want it for free. Folks serious about using open source, pay monthly retainers to open source developers. For that, they get industrial grade software, with lots of input to the development direction, and in general, support is only a phone call or email away.
Re:Choose open source ERP (Score:2)
It really depends on the case and whether or not the critical incident is a software bug or something else. When I've opened P1 cases with PeopleSoft I've had excellent and extremely responsive service from their analysts.
In the few cases
Re:Choose open source ERP (Score:3, Insightful)
Anything less is unacceptable.
As another poster says, it's all about passing the buck.
I've been on the client and vending end of hundreds of support contracts.
Hardware support contracts can be expensive but are worthwhile if uptime is critical, mainly because you tend to get fast access to spare parts.
Software support contracts however are a complete waste of time and money. About all they're good for is couriering replacement media. If the software has a heisenbug it will never be fixed ("we can'
"Microsoft Eyes Peoplesoft Customers" (Score:5, Funny)
That's like saying 'serial killer eyes next victim.'
Common sense? (Score:5, Insightful)
Not bloody likely many will switch (Score:3, Insightful)
The Microsoft offer "is barely worth the paper the press release was written on," Shepherd said. I think the end of the article sums it up succinctly.
Re:Not bloody likely many will switch (Score:2)
The partners and consultants that would facilitate just such a transition won't even be looking at prospective users/customers unless they are growing and likely to continue to. That means change in the enterprise anyway, and that means the budget to do something about it. Remember, most companies
As a user of both Microsoft & Peoplesoft produ (Score:5, Funny)
My employeer launched their new Peoplesoft HR website last month, and I 500 errors every couple of clicks...
So, since MS is really good at serving 500 errors, I'm sure they will be an excellent replacement for Peoplesoft's products.
Re:As a user of both Microsoft & Peoplesoft pr (Score:2)
Re:As a user of both Microsoft & Peoplesoft pr (Score:2)
'scuse you. (Score:4, Funny)
Bill, excuse yourself after you eat, please. Gosh. That's not right.
Soko
Oracle has nothing to worry about... (Score:4, Funny)
Just what I was thinking (Score:2)
Re:Oracle has nothing to worry about... (Score:2)
I've got it! (Score:2)
I can see the marketroids now: "Alpaca is fast and lean, able to scale to new heights, and it's warm and fuzzy, just like all Microsoft products. Alpaca: It's no goat!"
No surprise. (Score:2, Insightful)
In particular, consolidation in an industry helps Microsoft. Only a healthy market can resist takeover by Microsoft, and vice versa.
Open source can make some headway (Score:2)
I think this project can gain a lot of ground from this Peoplesoft fiasco if it improves its marketing... and doesnt require users to use Oracle as a backend ($1500 is a lot of money for little people). I think there is currently work going on for porting this to postgres though.
Re:Open source can make some headway (Score:2)
People for whom $1500 is a lot of money don't need Peoplesoft. Seriously. Sure, a modern ERP is expensive. Same holds true for specialized manufacturing software, WMS applications, et cetera. But you know what? Its mission critical - more important to a large company than any other software product, and a damn site more critical a choice than an OS platform.
Can you imagine the financial fallout if, say, everyone working for Coca Cola didn't get paid one week?
Nonsense. (Score:2)
Re:Nonsense. (Score:2)
Not really. In a company of 20 people (and I know something about this, being a principal of a small company [blueskylogistics.com] myself), everybody knows everybody else. You can do payroll by filling out a web form on ADP.com in 15 minutes. Employee files all fit inside a single file cabinet drawer, and you probably only h
Re:Open source can make some headway (Score:2)
$1500 is a lot for individuals, it's also would cover one consultant-day to cover the implementation - if the consultant came in late, left early and took a long lunch...
Seriously, I've worked everywhere from a 20 man shop up through some of the big software and hardware manufacturer's and $1,500 is noise, an almost trivial amount...
Re:Open source can make some headway (Score:2)
The Java API supports complete customization of the L&F (look and feel) of any application. You don't have to use the default appearance.
Steep Discounts (Score:2)
I for one... (Score:3, Insightful)
At best, I consider MS to provide a good prototyping environment and an acceptable, if buggy, desktop. That said, even their products would be a great improvement over the state of that particular sector and it seems that only IBM and MS are big enough to convince the PHBs that they are viable alternatives.
Re:I for one... (Score:2)
The IT side also tends to fail by using modification as a first resort to meeting user needs.
PeopleSoft (Score:5, Funny)
I hope PeopleSoft is wiped from the earth. I'd take Microsoft's unpleasant, buggy software over PeopleSoft's completely unusable atrocities any day.
Re:PeopleSoft (Score:2)
Actually I thought MS Works was quite fine. But then again, that was Works 5 on DOS 5.0 back in '94.
Re:PeopleSoft (Score:2)
Re:PeopleSoft (Score:2)
Re:PeopleSoft (Score:2)
Compare that to Microsoft, whose products often work fine in Wine, whose website is completely Gecko and KHTML compatible, and whose products actually WORK (albeit badly).
Microsoft's software actually possesses virtues
Re:PeopleSoft (Score:2)
Re:PeopleSoft (Score:2)
With Microsoft's What? (Score:2)
Ah, never heard of it...
Guess that answers that question...
Kuali Project (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.kualiproject.org/
if a university's going to move off of peoplesoft, and they can stick it out, this might be a safer move than signing in blood with MS.
What it really means: (Score:2)
We use Axapta where I work. (Score:3, Interesting)
Here's a quick example: you open a list of 1000 items that are displayed in a grid. You want to see the 500th item. You'd think that you just grab the scroll bar and scroll down to the middle, right? WRONG!!! That will take you to about record 20. If you want to go the the 500th item, you'll have to hit PgDn about 100 times. And each time you hit PgDn, you'll have to wait about half a second for the grid to redraw. If you have your doctorate in mathematics you might be able to figure that you're looking at about a minute to just to scroll down a short list of items. Seriously. And it's all like that. I don't know how people write software that badly.
I've never used Peoplesoft, but I cannot imagine that it is even conceivable that it could be any worse than Axapta.
Re:We use Axapta where I work. (Score:3)
Uh-huh... (Score:3, Funny)
Because the future is always certian when it comes to Microsoft software products!
If they were that foolish to buy PSFT (Score:3, Insightful)
Wait now, we use use PSFT in house! Doh!
In all seriousness, i'm not that impressed with peoplesoft... We use the HR, Helpdesk and eRecruit packages... I've been the prime DBA for the latter two. You can say what you want about Oracle products being complex, unwieldy but it provides tremendous flexibility. If you know what your doing there's a ton of stats and debugging info available to you. Psft on the other hand is an absolutely nightmare to tune.
Let Microsoft play for tablescraps (Score:3, Interesting)
The biggest player is SAP, and they will be extracting their due.
microsoft eyeing peoplesoft customers (Score:2)
So they lied under oath again... (Score:2)
Microsoft held firm in its testimony that it has no plans to move its current enterprise application software products into Oracle's large enterprise space, despite Oracle's defense attorney holding up a number of Microsoft documents which outline the high-functioning product migrating into that market.
Oracle Peop [itutilitypipeline.com]
Whale and a pirana (Score:2)
Microsoft has announced an intent to pick up some of the PeopleSoft customers currently fleeing from possible support contract increases and an uncertain future.
This is like a big whale (Oracle) is about to get bitten by a pirana (Microsoft) and the customers will have to pay, and pay and pay.
Now if the companies invested in open source or their own source code built on an open POSIX based system then these vendors would not be able to do this. If you had the source you don't have to worry about a ve
Re:PeopleSoft? Axapta? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:PeopleSoft? Axapta? (Score:5, Funny)
This is PeopleSoft:
You're looking for a job, and each of the potential employeers have a brand new Job website, but they all look strangly familar. You find job you like and decide to apply. You need to register for an account. Ok, type in Username, email address, password, and password again to verify.
Ok, it's sending an email to you to verify your email address. 5 minutes later, the email isn't there. An hour later you are still waiting. Hmmm... 2 hours later email still isn't there. OK, time to go outside. I'll apply for this job tomorrow.
Next day, you finally get an email from "Peoplesoft " with your account information. Great!
You log in, and fill out a couple small forms. Cool! They let you submit your resume and they'll automatically populate the webform using the contents of your resume! Oops! Your resume is in RTF or PDF format and their website only accepts MS Word documents. Fuck... but this is for a Unix sysadmin job. Ok, well I have a pirated version of MS Word around here somewhere...
So you reformat your resume using MS Word, and submit it to the Resume wizard. Dang, the stupid wizard put your job title as "TheLastCompany IworkedAt, Inc", the company name as "2003, 2004" and it trimmed off the last few lines describing all your job duties... dang I need to fix that up. Maybe it would have been better to type in all this stuff by hand in the first place...
WHen you're done with all the manual editing and hit the Submit button, you feel like you accomplished something.
And immediately afterwards, an email is sent to the HR STaff, and PeopleSoft has fucked up the formatting so much it looks worse then the ASCII rendering of the goatse.cx image... the HR assistant prints out your resume and adds it to the stack of 300 other resumes for a dozen different positions.
Later, you don't aren't considered for the job because you wrote a sentence in proper English like this:
"Researched, designed and configured web load balancing scheme using Apache webserver."
Some fucktard got the job instead, because they
wrote a resume to receive a high score with the keyword "Apache" and "Load balancing", like this:
"Researched load balancing scheme using Apache webserver"
"Designed load balancing scheme using Apache webserver"
"Configured load balancing scheme using Apache webserver"
"I'ma fucking apache god. APACHE APACHE APACHE APACHE"
That, my friend, is PeopleSoft.
Re:PeopleSoft? Axapta? (Score:2)
Hey there, it's a joke... laugh.
I am employeed (no thanks to PeopleSoft), and I usually get a job offer if I can get my foot in the door. Trouble is,
Sure I'm bitter, but that's because the only time I notice PeopleSoft software is because it's in my way-- today I couldn't enter my vacation hours because I'm getting 500 errors in the new PS system. And I've seen some of the results that HR passed on because eRecruit said it was a good match-- and ye
Re:PeopleSoft? Axapta? (Score:2, Informative)
Axapta is an ERP [hyperdictionary.com] system. It was originally started in Denmark by a company called Damgaard. The company merged with Navision Software in 2000, and Navision was then purchased by Microsoft.
It's a powerful package; AFAIK it can run on either Oracle or SQL Server.
You can find a detailed review here [accounting...dvisor.com] or, if you only want the differences from other products, go here [accounting...dvisor.com].
Re: You MUST be clueless (Score:2, Interesting)
MicroSoft has very little credibility in this space and almost no presence among the larger ERP implementations. You are just as clueless or misinformed as you accuse the original poster of being.
Although I'm no fan of SQL Server, I have to disagree with the or
Re: You MUST be clueless (Score:2, Funny)
None.
And they earned it, too.
Re:What? (Score:2)
It's sold in modules (if you need crm you buy it, otherwise you don't, same for the web portal or business intelligence tools etc).
It's extremely customizable because of it's system with X++ (the language) and the AOT/morphX environment. You get easy (object oriented) access to the code of almost everything that's in standard axapta except the kernel (base features, X++ implementation...), but every form or report you see has the X++ code right the