Posted by acts_as_flinn
Fri, 01 Dec 2006 01:23:00 GMT
After a very long wait, I just want to let everyone know that the beta program will be launching in a week or two. We’ve made major breakthroughs, and we’re just about ready to start the closed beta.
You can imagine how excited we are to launch this program, and we hope all of our testers are just as excited.
For prospective buyers we’re bringing a simple inventory management system with no strings attached. No IT staff needed, no million dollar upfront investment required, never pay for updates, you don’t even have to worry about backups…we do it for you.
More big news coming soon!
Posted in TRAQInventory, Inventory Management | no comments | no trackbacks
Posted by acts_as_flinn
Fri, 06 Oct 2006 03:06:00 GMT
First of all we appreciate all the interest in the beta program! Thanks to everyone who has signed so far or shown interest.
We’re still about four week off, so there is still time to sign up.
Until then bear with us, send us your thoughts on inventory management, what you’re looking for, what are your needs. We’ve pretty much got a handle on what we’re going live with but we’re still interested in your input. We’d also like to know what type of software you’re using already or what software you’d like to integrate with.
If you’ve got input email us
Posted in Business Development, Inventory Management | no comments | no trackbacks
Posted by acts_as_flinn
Tue, 22 Aug 2006 01:29:00 GMT
When we founded Right Traq I had tons of experience doing custom PHP Inventory applications. Some of them were plain old function based, and others MVC based. About a year before we got started I had a prototype asset manager that I did in rails-0.12.1. This project was my first go at a rails application and I was astonished. It was relatively easy to develop, and in about 2 weeks I had about the same features as a huge PHP project I worked on for 6 months. Ruby on Rails really made development simple. Most of routine tasks needed for my projects were already taken care of in Rails, and better yet I could easily add features that really separate it from the competition.
TRAQInventory is a Ruby on Rails Inventory Management application.
After 6 months of development TRAQInventory is the result. We like to call it Inventory Management 2.0 because TRAQInventory brings Web 2.0 features that drive social networking, user generated content, and semantic web content to inventory management. Inventory Management 2.0 means your inventory data can actually tell you something, send you messages, integrate with other apps and be more of an information tool than a cumbersome liability that underperforms, and wastes time and money.
So I am pleased to announce that we’re opening the signup for the TRAQInventory Beta program.
Click Beta Signup to sign up for the TRAQInventory beta program.
Posted in Inventory Management, Rails Development, TRAQInventory | no comments | no trackbacks