SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Crystal Systems (CRYSF) - AD 2000 Solution IPO -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DD™ who wrote (233)3/10/1998 11:20:00 AM
From: Ariella  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 572
 
DD -- I would say so, yes; that, plus the apparent realization by the Street that the stock was amazingly oversold.

Good luck.
Ariella



To: DD™ who wrote (233)3/10/1998 1:07:00 PM
From: Jeffery E. Forrest  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 572
 

BUSINESS MONITOR: Softly, softly approach
urged on euro

The Daily Telegraph London
Mon, Mar 09 1998

ANY business that chooses to convert its whole trading
operations at the beginning of European monetary union
transition will be taking a "huge risk", warned the Business &
Accounting Software Developers Association.

It said companies should not convert to the euro next year,
whether their country is in or out of the monetary union,
because the computer software for running the accounts will
not be available.

The association, whose membership of over 100 represents
nearly the whole of the market, cannot guarantee compliant
software even by the end of next year.

The problem, says the association, is that local laws on
procedures and requirements are still being formulated.

"The fault lies with the politicians who have made the job
extremely difficult by failing to provide the information which
the industry needed within a reasonable timeframe."

As a result the software companies have got as far as they
can, but by next year will have only pilot or test versions
available, for "bedding in". These "beta" versions of
computer programs are notoriously flighty and frequently
need several revisions before being properly marketable.

That is going to present a bit of a problem for companies
priding themselves on pioneering the new currency. Siemens,
BMW, Rover Group and many other German companies have
said they will start accounting in euros from next year.

Siemens even said it would pay workers in euros from
October. Other major companies such as Philips and Bupa
have also vowed to shift.

That means British suppliers to them, or suppliers to suppliers
may be forced into using euros, despite Britain's being
outside the monetary union for years to come. Companies that
thought themselves protected from change by the
government's aloofness from the euro, and by their own lack
of exports are now facing imminent change.

Many accounting programs, even the versions for small
business, can cope with multiple currencies.

That means they should be be able to cope with the euro as
well, but it is worth checking with the producer whether a
currently used version will cope, and if not when will such a
version become available and whether that will cost extra.

The news-sheet Finance IT Update suggests there are six
questions to ask the software supplier to check the program
will cope:

does the installed program have to be updated to deal in
euros as well?

will hardware or attendant programs like databases have to be
changed?

what modules are updated apart from general ledger:
management reporting, accounts payable/receivable,
sales/purchase ordering, materials management, payroll?

are the year 2000 compliance and euro upgrades separate?

will both meet the standards set by Business and Accounting
Software Developers Association?

can the system distinguish between countries in EU but not
euro, and non-EU?

But the association warned that businesses "should delay as
long as they can" after the start of monetary union before
making the euro their main trading currency. They will have
enough worries trying to decide whether the system can cope
with the year 2000, and finding skilled and affordable
computer people to comply with the millennium. They should
delay transferring totally to euro until 2001, the association
advised.

(1998 (c) The Telegraph plc, London)
guide-p.infoseek.com