"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I'd really like to get a web based fastmanager. Also a web based quickbooks. Although the web based version of quick books sucks, is expensive and only works with IE on PCs. ugh.
Wow. I thought that the main selling point of Mac is super compatibility.
QuoteI'd really like to get a web based fastmanager. Also a web based quickbooks. Although the web based version of quick books sucks, is expensive and only works with IE on PCs. ugh. We use Saasu, web-based accounting. I looked at the web-based QB. It looked like poo and had some horrific and terrifying feedback from users so I went with this one. It's very "open-ended" in that it can be or can't be just about whatever you want it to. And it's $25 a month. They have an iphone app but not an android one yet, but it does work just fine in any browser. It is not as powerful or convenient in the reporting or client/job tracking department as QB. Once there's more api coder type people around here I'm going to have someone really juice it up for us though. I'm wondering if, with the use of API or something similar, we're getting close enough to having programs like this integrate more easily into a "cloud platform", which is what I want ultimately. A singular interface, accessible from multiple devices that organizes and integrates all the various functions you need even though the individual app's are their own creation. I don't know enough about all this to say if we have a standardized language to achieve this or not. It's the only major beef I have with web-based apps- they don't integrate too well. If, for example, when I entered a due date in Saasu for a job activity that due date popped right up on google calendar I'd be a real happy camper. If Apple pulls something like that out of their hat, I'll pay up for it but it doesn't look like we're quite there yet.
QuoteAnd Frog, I think Macs may have actually eclipsed Windows-based machines in terms of compatibility. We have a wireless printer at the store and it hooked up just fine to all the macs, first try, but our windows 7 point of sale...no dice after hours of troubleshooting. Hell hath indeed frozen over. It's always been just the other way around.
And Frog, I think Macs may have actually eclipsed Windows-based machines in terms of compatibility. We have a wireless printer at the store and it hooked up just fine to all the macs, first try, but our windows 7 point of sale...no dice after hours of troubleshooting. Hell hath indeed frozen over. It's always been just the other way around.