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Author Topic: Does anyone know what a  (Read 1487 times)

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Elite Pete

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Does anyone know what a
« on: 12 October 2008, 10:46:09 »

SAP System is?
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JonArgraig

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #1 on: 12 October 2008, 10:47:52 »

SAP is an acronym for "System Application & Products" which creates a common centralised database for all the applications running in an organization.

or it could be some thing else  ;D
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Elite Pete

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #2 on: 12 October 2008, 10:49:54 »

Sounds good to me :y
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Andy B

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #3 on: 12 October 2008, 10:51:33 »

Quote
SAP System is?

A pain in the 4r$e, and is used at work as the most complicted store/part number system ever devised. I'm sure that if you were a German accountant it's a brilliant system, but for us it's just far to complex.  ;)
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Albatross

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #4 on: 12 October 2008, 10:56:57 »

The abbreviation, acronym, or initialism SAP may stand for:

Ramón Villeda Morales International Airport, located in San Pedro Sula, Honduras (IATA code is SAP)
Serum Amyloid P Component, the identical serum form of Amyloid P component (AP)
Santa Paula, California (Amtrak station code: SAP)
Second audio program, an auxiliary audio channel for television that can be broadcast or transmitted both over the air and by cable TV
Soon As Possible, used in manufacturing and shipping
Special Assistance Plan, an academic programme in Singapore
Special access program, Secret clandestine operations program, run by secret governmental agency
Stabilisation and Association process of the European Union for the western Balkans states
Statements of Administrative Policy, the formal mechanism through which presidential views about pending legislation are communicated to Capitol Hill
Standard Assessment Procedure, the UK government's recommended system for energy rating of dwellings
Statutory Accounting Principals
Strategic Action Programme as part of a GEF international waters project
Strong Anthropic Principle, the universe must produce life
Structural Adjustment Program of the IMF
Substance Abuse Professional, a specific qualifications needed by drug/alcohol counselors in order to perform drug assessments on individuals tested under the U.S. Federal DOT (United States Department of Transportation) guidelines
Superabsorbent polymer, a polymer able to absorb tens or hundreds of times its own weight in water
South African Police, the national law enforcement organisation of South Africa between 1913 and 1994
Shrimp Alkaline Phosphatase, a common alkaline phosphatase from a species of arctic shrimp
In computing and technology:

SAP AG, a global software company headquartered in Walldorf, Germany or its various products.
Either SAP R/3 or SAP ERP, two versions of the enterprise resource planning software product of SAP AG.
Systems, Applications and Products in Data Processing - origin from SAP AG
Session Announcement Protocol, a computer protocol for broadcasting multicast session information
Service Advertising Protocol, an IPX network protocol that makes the process of adding and removing services on an IPX internetwork dynamic
Service Access Point, an identifying label for network endpoints used in OSI networking
Atari SAP music format, format used for storing music from 8-bit Atari computers and consoles
System Assistance Processor, an auxiliary I/O processor on IBM mainframes
Relating to political parties:

Socialist Alternative Politics
Socialist Workers' Party of Germany, from German Sozialistische Arbeiterpartei Deutschlands
Socialist Workers Party (Denmark), from Danish Socialistisk Arbejderparti
South African Party
Swedish Social Democratic Party, from Swedish Sveriges socialdemokratiska arbetareparti
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cem_devecioglu

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #5 on: 12 October 2008, 10:57:27 »

A software organization based in Germany firstly founded in Germany in 1972..

The sofware itself have real time data processing   and 3d multidimensional reporting capabilities (if you can use ;D)

Have the self programming language support (not useful like other languages)

Based on my company experience , it purely depends on the companies underlying structure..if you are developed enough and have very good IT base and staff..Ok to use..

Or else you are in trouble..Bang and Olafsen failed..

[size=8]ps: we will be next[/size]
« Last Edit: 12 October 2008, 11:02:25 by cem_devecioglu »
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cem_devecioglu

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #6 on: 12 October 2008, 10:59:34 »

As an example the same task written in .net code (microsoft) runs a 3 d model in half a minute where the abap code cant complete and goes nearly infinite loop..
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cem_devecioglu

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #7 on: 12 October 2008, 11:00:54 »

Quote
Quote
SAP System is?

A pain in the 4r$e, and is used at work as the most complicted store/part number system ever devised. I'm sure that if you were a German accountant it's a brilliant system, but for us it's just far to complex.  ;)

Yep..cant explain better ;D :y
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Albatross

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #8 on: 12 October 2008, 11:02:19 »

SAP R/3 is the former name of the main enterprise resource planning software produced by SAP AG. Its new name is SAP ERP.

The first version of SAP's flagship enterprise software was a financial Accounting system named R/1. (The "R" was for "Real-time data processing"). The pronunciation is often mistakenly referred to as "sap", as in tree sap. The correct naming is the individual letters S-A-P. This was replaced by R/2 at the end of the 1970s. SAP R/2 was a mainframe based business application software suite that was very successful in the 1980s and early 1990s. It was particularly popular with large multinational European companies who required soft-real-time business applications, with multi-currency and multi-language capabilities built in. With the advent of distributed client-server computing SAP AG brought out a client-server version of the software called SAP R/3 that was manageable on multiple platforms and operating systems, such as Microsoft Windows or UNIX since 1999, which opened up SAP to a whole new customer base. SAP R/3 was officially launched on 6 July 1992. SAP came to dominate the large business applications market over the next 10 years.

SAP R/3 is arranged into distinct functional modules, covering the typical functions in place in an organization. The most widely used modules are Financials and Controlling (FICO), Human Resources (HR), Materials Management (MM), Sales & Distribution (SD), and Production Planning (PP). Those modules, as well as the additional components of SAP R/3, are detailed in the next section.

Each module handles specific business tasks on its own, but is linked to the others where applicable. For instance, an invoice from the Billing transaction of Sales & Distribution will pass through to accounting, where it will appear in accounts receivable and cost of goods sold.

SAP has typically focused on best practice methodologies for driving its software processes, but has more recently expanded into vertical markets. In these situations, SAP produces specialized modules (referred to as IS or Industry Specific) geared toward a particular market segment, such as utilities or retail.

Using SAP often requires the payment of hefty license fees, as the customers have effectively outsourced various business software development tasks to SAP. By specializing in software development, SAP hopes to provide a better value to corporations than they could if they attempted to develop and maintain their own applications.

SAP R/3 is a client/server based application, utilizing a 3-tiered model. A presentation layer, or client, interfaces with the user. The application layer houses all the business-specific logic, and the database layer records and stores all the information about the system, including transactional and configuration data.

SAP R/3 functionality is structured using its own proprietary language called ABAP (Advanced Business Application Programming). ABAP, or ABAP/4 is a fourth generation language (4GL), geared towards the creation of simple, yet powerful programs. R/3 also offers a complete development environment where developers can either modify existing SAP code to modify existing functionality or develop their own functions, whether reports or complete transactional systems within the SAP framework.

ABAP's main interaction with the database system is via Open SQL statements. These statements allow a developer to query, update, or delete information from the database. Advanced topics include GUI development and advanced integration with other systems. With the introduction of ABAP Objects, ABAP provides the opportunity to develop applications with object-oriented programming.

The most difficult part of SAP R/3 is its implementation, since SAP R/3 is never used the same way in any two places. For instance, Atlas Copco can have a different implementation of SAP R/3 from Procter & Gamble. Some companies may run multiple productive clients/systems or even multiple instances of SAP R/3. This is seen, for example, when a company running SAP acquires a new business already running SAP. They may elect to keep both systems separate, migrate one into the other, or migrate both onto a completely new instance.

The system landscape is ultimately the customer's decision. There are definite pros and cons on the continuum from single global instance / productive client (master data, impact of configuration changes on multiple business units) to separate instances per business unit (hardware costs and communication between instances/clients)

Two primary issues are the root of the complexity and of the differences:

Customization configuration - Within R/3, there are tens of thousands of database tables that may be used to control how the application behaves. For instance, each company will have its own accounting "Chart of Accounts" which reflects how its transactions flow together to represent its activity. That will be specific to a given company. In general, the behavior (and appearance) of virtually every screen and transaction is controlled by configuration tables. This gives the implementor great power to make the application behave differently for different environments. With that power comes considerable complexity.
Extensions, Bolt-Ons - In any company, there will be a need to develop interface programs to communicate with other corporate information systems. This generally involves developing ABAP/4 code, and considerable "systems integration" effort to either determine what data is to be drawn out of R/3 or to interface into R/3 to load data into the system.
Due to the complexity of implementation, these companies recruit highly skilled SAP consultants to do the job. The implementation must consider the company's needs and resources. Some companies implement only a few modules of SAP while others may want numerous modules.
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Albatross

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #9 on: 12 October 2008, 11:02:54 »

The SAP ERP application is an integrated enterprise resource planning (ERP) software manufactured by SAP AG that targets business software requirements of midsize and large organizations in all industries and sectors. It is the successor product to SAP R/3.

SAP ERP includes four individual solutions that support key functional areas:

SAP ERP Financials
SAP ERP Human Capital Management
SAP ERP Operations
SAP ERP Corporate Services

The evolution of mySAP ERP
SAP R/3 through version 4.6c consisted of various applications on top of SAP Basis, SAP's set of middleware programs and tools.

When SAP R/3 Enterprise was launched in 2002, all applications were built on top of the SAP Web Application Server. Extension sets were used to deliver new features and kept the core as stable as possible. The Web Application Server contained all the capabilities of SAP Basis.

The first edition of mySAP ERP was launched in 2003 and bundled previously separate products, including SAP R/3 Enterprise, SAP Strategic Enterprise Management (SEM) and extension sets. The SAP Web Application Server was wrapped into NetWeaver, which was also introduced in 2003.

A complete architecture change took place with the introduction of mySAP ERP edition 2004. R/3 Enterprise was replaced with the introduction of ERP Central Component (SAP ECC). The SAP Business Warehouse, SAP Strategic Enterprise Management and Internet Transaction Server were also merged into SAP ECC, allowing users to run them under one instance. Architectural changes were also made to support an enterprise services architecture to transition customers to a services-oriented architecture.

More than 2,300 customers are using the latest version of mySAP ERP, since it was released earlier 2005, according to SAP. SAP reported a 20% growth in new ERP license deals in the second quarter of 2005.
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Albatross

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #10 on: 12 October 2008, 11:03:58 »

Good ol' Wiki(lies)pedia. :y
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PaulW

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #11 on: 12 October 2008, 11:19:48 »

used SAP in an old job about 8 years ago, was pretty much in its infancy...

slow
crap
buggy
VERY nasty UI design...

not sure if its improved at all over the past 8 years however, as I've refused to go anywhere near that POS.
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cem_devecioglu

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #12 on: 12 October 2008, 11:31:51 »

Quote
used SAP in an old job about 8 years ago, was pretty much in its infancy...

slow
crap
buggy
VERY nasty UI design...

not sure if its improved at all over the past 8 years however, as I've refused to go anywhere near that POS.

still not different...
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Elite Pete

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #13 on: 12 October 2008, 11:34:52 »

Cheers :y

Ive just applied for a job that uses a SAP system, which i've not used so I thought it best to find out what it is ;)
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cem_devecioglu

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Re: Does anyone know what a
« Reply #14 on: 12 October 2008, 11:38:21 »

really expensive tool so you can demand a very high salary.. :y
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