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Technology Stocks : SAP A.G. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ibexx who wrote (661)4/15/1998 1:23:00 PM
From: fred douglas liebling  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3424
 
We need to know from some of our German friends what the shorts are doing with the stock. Should have done better in my German college course!Congrats esp. to the old timers on this board who didn't listen to Barron's when they called into question the y2k problem.



To: Ibexx who wrote (661)4/15/1998 1:24:00 PM
From: Jay8088  Respond to of 3424
 
A rousing endorsement from Microsoft.

Microsoft Says Nobody Does It Better Than SAP
(04/08/98; 12:33 p.m. EST)
By Stuart Glascock

At a forum Tuesday
on SAP's R/3 on
Microsoft Windows
NT, a key Microsoft
executive praised
the German software
maker's enterprise
resource-planning
solutions and
called SAP the
Redmond software
giant's "greatest
partner."

Microsoft's chief
information
officer, John
Conners, outlined
how the world's
largest personal
software maker has
been streamlining
and standardizing
all its business
processes around
the world with SAP
R/3 on Win NT and
SQL Server.

SAP R/3 offered a
scalable,
multinational
system with
integrated business
functions, and an
open three-tier
client/server
infrastructure,
Conners said.
Microsoft (company
profile) also chose
the Intel
architecture-based
platform from
Houston-based
Compaq for
hardware, and New
York-based Deloitte
& Touche Consulting
Group as the
consulting partner
for the huge task.

Two years ago,
Microsoft started
the SAP project to
consolidate global
finance and
procurement and
have since added
the original
equipment
manufacturer (OEM)
licensing business,
human resources,
manufacturing, and
distribution on
SAP, Win NT, and
SQL, Conners said.

"The key thing is
we have to be much
better at running
NT and BackOffice
in the enterprise
in the future than
we have been in the
past," said
Conners, also a
Microsoft vice
president. "The
company has learned
more about the
enterprise in the
past year than it
has in its
cumulative
history."

Within a few
months, all the
company's remaining
Unix, Digital
Equipment's VAX,
and mainframe
solutions will be
replaced, he said.

"If it can scale to
our $15 billion
company, it can
scale to a lot of
companies," Conners
told about 220
customers and OEMs
at the event. "It
can scale to all
but the top 3 or 4
percent. You will
see us prove that
over the next three
or four months."

Attendees were a
mix of customers
who have
implemented SAP R/3
and those who are
deciding which
enterprise
technology to
adopt. They also
listened to
implementation
stories from
medium-sized
companies, such as
Applied Automation,
a $100 million
manufacturer of
process
instrumentation in
Bartlesville, Okla.
The company started
using R/3 in 1989
and recently
converted to R/3 on
Compaq with Win NT.

By showcasing how
SAP software is
driving Microsoft,
the company clearly
gave SAP an
extraordinary nod.

"There is not a
stronger partner
that Microsoft has
than SAP," Conners
said. "We're both
very committed to
making NT and our
platform and their
environment very
successful."

Six years of joint
development work is
paying off, said
Susanne Radley,
global SAP account
manager for
Microsoft's
Application
Developers Customer
Unit. Win NT 4.0
and the upcoming
Win NT 5.0 have
been extensively
tested on SAP R/3,
and customers are
responding, she
said.

"In Europe, we can
definitely tell SAP
has helped
Microsoft's
positioning for the
enterprise,
absolutely," Radley
said. "We looked
for a really,
really demanding
software package to
test NT. If NT can
handle SAP, it can
handle anything
because SAP is very
demanding. We use
it as a proof
point." [TW]

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I guess with partners like MSFT, INTL, Colgate-Palmolive, GM, and now Phillips, one could do worse than SAP even at this price level..... ( a sideliner biting the bullet... but it hurts! :( )