Making field techs happy with an IBM i mobile application
Systems Implementation used ASNA Mobile RPG to bring parts of its IBM i-based application to smartphones for use by technicians in the field. A single programmer, with no previous Mobile RPG experience, wrote the mobile app, in ILE RPG, in less than 90 days.
Systems Implementation looks to the future with ASNA Wings
As an IBM i ISV, Systems Implementation needed to modernize its RPG application to ensure it would remain competitive and relevant amongst a sea of PC-based competitors. It chose ASNA Wings to resolve its user interface dilemma. Systems Implementation customized Wings standard output to add dashboard-like features and a vastly improved, visual, menuing system.
Pathix Uses ASNA Monarch to Revitalize Its Flagship Software
Pathix, based in St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada, specializes in management solutions for industries such as government/military, communications, insurance, utilities, engineering, aviation, and aerospace. In order to successfully market Navixa, Pathix needed to make a strategic platform shift with its Navixa code base. Pathix used ASNA Monarch and ASNA Visual RPG for .NET to migrate and modernize Navixa to .NET.
MPL uses ASNA Wings to improve AS/400 operator productivity
MPL creates and sells household cleaning products, personal hygiene products, and DIY products throughout Europe. MPL’s green-screen RPG application otherwise does a great job for the business but its user interface was limiting productivity and business possibilities. With the technical help of Galilea IT, a Spanish AS/400 IT consultancy and ASNA distributor, the team used ASNA Wings to modernize the existing RPG application and create a great solution for MPL.
Bridging vertical software silos with ASNA Visual RPG
Marous Brothers Construction is a leading commercial construction company and has spent the past thirty-five years building some of the most recognizable commercial buildings in the Midwest. ASNA’s Visual RPG and DataGate for SQL Server empowered Marous Brothers Construction’s Rick Schuster to solve the data integration challenge that had long plagued the company.