[comp.unix.questions] Unix & accounting software

mchawi@garnet.berkeley.edu (05/30/89)

	(I probably will get more flames than jo-jo's college fund)
	I represent a group of intense c hackers out of UC Berkeley
	on a very small shoestring who have set out to create the
	best accounting software that exists.  With that apology,
	please forward this letter to the nearest accountant that
	is staring at a Sun and wondering what to do with it:
--------------------------------------------------------------

Market Transaction System would like to introduce Prince.
Prince is an accounting system developed by MTS for owners of
Sun desktop computers.  You may wonder why Prince. Here are reasons:

	Prince is a good deal:  Prince is $500, complete.

	Prince is new technology: Engineered software - outrageously
	efficient and flexible.  Compute retained earnings dynamically.
	This means that you never have to worry about end-of-month or
	end-of-year closing and all the problems it creates.  Add,
	modify, or delete any journal entry, no matter what the transaction
	date is. User-configurable subjournals. In the next version, we will
	have real-time, automatic depreciation & amorization of assets.
	We don't tell what the maximum accounts, or journal entries,
	are for Prince.  Because there are no maximums. The capabilities
	of Prince are limited to the machine it resides on.

	MTS supports Prince to the fullest: Professional help and no hidden
	costs for add-on modules/upgrades. And we're working on it continuously.

	Special offer: MTS will provide free upgrades to all future versions
	and releases of Prince for the next year for all purchases by 6/15/89.

For more info, call or write; Ask for me, Greg Narizny.  I'll be glad to
help you with any information about Prince, and how it can help you or
your business with money matters.

					Gregory Narizny
					Market Transaction System
					6515 Telegraph Ave #1
					Oakland, CA 94609
					(415) 658-8878

wcs) (06/07/89)

In article <25032@agate.BERKELEY.EDU> mchawi@garnet.berkeley.edu writes:
]	I represent a group of intense c hackers out of UC Berkeley
]	on a very small shoestring who have set out to create the
]	best accounting software that exists.  With that apology,
]	please forward this letter to the nearest accountant that
]	is staring at a Sun and wondering what to do with it:
		[ what to do with it? - you pay for it from the	  ]
		[ capital budget and use accelerated depreciation ]

I'm posting a followup rather than  replying directly because I've
occasionally had to find accounting systems, and the market was
pretty thin the last time.

The one requirement I'd place on *any* new accounting system is that
it had better use a standard DBMS interface.  I'll tolerate
something wired directly onto Oracle or Informix, but I'd prefer
something that speaks raw SQL and doesn't really care which  DBMS is
underneath.  Why?  Because I'm going to need the flexibility to
customize things,  build my  own reports, feed the accounting data
into the inventory system or the quality control system or the
robotic-warehouse-reconfigurator (next year, anyway.)  Because if
the system's any good, I'll want to interface it with things I
haven't bought yet, to solve problems neither you nor I  have
thought about yet.  And I want to be sure it'll run  on my current
machine, my next (or NeXT) machine, whatever.

I'd also prefer it to be curses-based, but alternatively I'll take X
Windows or maybe NeWS.  But no Sun-specific interfaces.

When  I was in college, I had a summer job  hacking an IBM System 34
for a small steel fabrication  company.  The machine was desk-sized,
had 48K of RAM and a 13 MB Winchester, spoke RPG II, and came with two IBM
representatives who kept the machine happy.  In  addition to the
steel-job estimation  program I was hacking, its main activity was
to do the payroll, billing, etc., and I was trying to teach  it
cost accounting as well.   The IBM guys always had to make adjustments
to the accounting system - the steel fabricating industry has a
number of accounting requirements that are different from
conventional manufacturing accounting systems (e.g. you *never* get
paid  the full amount until the building has been standing for a
year without falling down).  Every time IBM came out with a fix or
upgrade ( ~ monthly), the IBM guys had to install it and then
repatch the local mods.

This kind of rearrangement and customization are much easier in a
modular standards-based environment than in a custom-coded system.
-- 
# Bill Stewart, AT&T Bell Labs 2G218 Holmdel NJ 201-949-0705 ho95c.att.com!wcs
	# also cloned at 201-271-4712 tarpon.att.com!wcs 

#			... counting stars by candle light ....