BOSS Document Manager BOSS Document Manager was a Module of the - TopicsExpress



          

BOSS Document Manager BOSS Document Manager was a Module of the BOSS Workgroup Productivity System. Find You could find any document in seconds using any combination of search parameters. Notes You could attach pertinent notes to a document and save the notes by user and by date. Notes could be rich text and could be voice annotated using the NeXT built in sound system. Revisions You could list all revisions within any selected version of a document Return You could display a list of all documents checked out by the user. Select a document from the list, enter a summary of changes, indicate Current or Under Revision and the document is returned to the database with the proper parties notified. Check Out Places a special copy of a document in the users home directory, where changes can be made, assuming the user has write permission. The original Current version remains available to other users for reading and local use. Details Allowed authorized personnel to: modify categories and category architecture for a given document place individuals or groups on automatic notification, approval and wait lists. set up dependencies between documents in the system grant access permissions to individuals or groups using defined Access Control Lists Categories Documents could be cross-referenced under as many categories as desired. Categories could be structured either to be flat or hierarchical Categories allowed documents to be located easily and quickly. Boss Logic Inc. 1901 Landings Drive Mountain View, CA 94043 415 903 7000 Fax 415 903 7009 Qty in the collection: 2 FastTrack Schedule FastTrack Schedule was an easy-to-use Gantt chart scheduling tool thai allowed you to quickly create and update presentation-quality timelines. You could enter activities by drawing in custom bar and milestone types, typing dates and durations, or importing dates from other programs, you could enhance schedules by adding graphics, logos, floating text blocks, and titles. They could be printed to standard-size or wall-chart-size output. In scheduling projects, take advantage of additional columnar information, such as start and finish dares and times, duration calculations, scheduled versus actual comparisons, and percent complete. AEC Software $495 Qty in the collection: 1 Demo copyLicenseServ LicenseServ™ supported a rich set of licensing options, including floating licenses, per-user licenses, time-limited licenses, concurrent licenses, node-locked licenses, usage-based licenses and shared licenses. It was flexible, extremely easy to integrate with an existing application and totally transparent to the user. It ran seamlessly on a mixed network of computers by different manufacturers, such as NeXT, Sun, HP, DEC, IBM, Silicon Graphics and Dell. Prices included one year of technical support and a 30-day money-back guarantee. Viman Software. Inc. $2,000 standard, $1,000 additional platform: $5,000 extended, $2,000 additional platform Author! Author! Author! Author! brought powerful document management to the desktop. The produce, fully integrated with the NEXTSTEP File Viewer, made document management nearly transparent. Author! Author! automates the task of keeping change histories on documents. Every document was archived, and every change was recorded. The produce greatly enhances collaborative writing. Author! Author! prevented accidental erasure of someone elses work by assuring that only one user at a time could change a document. Workgroup scheduling makes it possible to assign a list of authors and have documents travel from one to another. Working with multi-document projects was easy. Author! Author! manages arbitrary collections of documents as if they were a single document. Author! Author! used high-speed indexing technology to search and retrieve documents. Quickly search multiple, distributed databases for documents by name, description, content, keyword, document status, and author. The product worked with an unlimited number of applications. Because it was an extension of the Workspace Manager, it transparently managed any file, document, or image. Dolphin Technologies Inc. $295 per user $995 for a floating license Qty in the collection: 0Whats with all the NeXT names? In this site and associated materials you will see many incarnations of the NeXTSTEP name: NextStep NeXTStep NeXTSTEP NeXTstep NEXTSTEP OpenStep OPENSTEP OpenStep for Solaris OPENSTEP for Windows How could there be so many ways to type NeXTSTEP and then OpenStep? Was there no corporate standards to control their brand? In fact standards were strictly adhered to and each of the above examples had well defined and unique meaning. For example: NeXT corporate name was always done with the lowecase e. The NeXT logo had to be tilted at exactly 27.5 degrees The exact Pantone colors were demanded on all Dealer Materials NeXTStep was used to indicate the whole system (GUI, Apps, MachOS, etc.) that was run on NeXT hardware. NeXTSTEP was used to indicate the whole system (originally NeXTStep) but now for NeXT and Intel computers. NeXTstep was used to indicate the package of GUI and API without the operating system for IBM was to add to AIX. NEXTSTEP was used when they added a PA/RISC version. Then it became NEXTSTEP/NeXT Computers, NEXTSTEP/Intel, NEXTSTEP/SPARC and NEXTSTEP/PA-RISC. OpenStep was a declaration that the NeXT Operating System was available to other hardware vendors. Hence the Open in its name. It was not a product but an Application Interface (API) definition which a vendor needed to support fully in order to call their system OpenStep compliant. OPENSTEP was NeXTs implementation of the OpenStep specification. In chronological sequence you could consider it NEXTSTEP 4.0. There were versions for the original NeXT hardware, Intel based PCs and eventually SPARC. OpenStep for Solaris was Suns implementation of the OpenStep standard. It was based on source code Sun purchased from NeXT. It was layered on the X Window system, which in turn was layered on top of Suns operating system, Solaris. OPENSTEP for Windows was developed by NeXT. It layered OPENSTEP functionality on top of Windows NT. A more detailed explanation is provided at OpenStep Confusion: >[OSI Approved License] > > >The X.Net, Inc. License > > >Copyright (c) 2011 Florentino Perez J.R, California, USA > >Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining >a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the >Software), to deal in the Software without restriction, including >without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, >distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to >permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to >the following conditions: > >The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be >included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. > >THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED AS IS, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, >EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF >MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. >IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY >CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, >TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE >SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. > >This agreement shall be governed in all respects by the laws of the >State of California and by the laws of the United States of America and The CLINTON Foundation. > >__________FLORENTINO PEREZ JRhref=creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/>
Posted on: Sun, 31 Aug 2014 06:10:23 +0000

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