Showing posts with label OpenWorld. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OpenWorld. Show all posts

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Intercompany Session at Oracle Open World

The content catalog is available so you can go and search for sessions.

There's an Intercompany session (S299151), it is not scheduled yet and as I am one of the presenters I can tell you it definitely isn't written yet, next week I'll get started on that with my copresenter from strategy, Helle.  the details of the session are below.  If you have any suggestions about what we should cover, how we might cover it or anything else for the session it would be great to hear from you - add them to the comments and let's see if we can try and tailor the presentation to the audience a little.










































Session ID:S299151
Session Title:Are Intercompany Processing and Reconciliation Currently a Pain Point for Your Enterprise?
Session Abstract:Having problems reconciling your intercompany activity? Would you like better documentation and visibility into your various intercompany activities? Are acquisitions or changing legal structures making intercompany processing more expensive and time-consuming? Attend this session, which discusses and demos capabilities of Oracle Advanced Global Intercompany System in Release 12 and implementation options such as using this application as a standalone hub for all your intercompany activity across multiple ERP instances from multiple vendors.
Track:APPLICATIONS, Oracle E-Business Suite
Focus Areas:Not Applicable
Session Type:Conference Session
Product Area:Financial Management
Duration:60 minutes
Room:Rm 2006
Speaker(s)/Company:David Haimes, Oracle.; Helle Hennings, Oracle

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Oracle Open World Nights

I live a few blocks from the Moscone in San Francisco I can hardly avoid it even if I wanted to, every bar and second rate resteruant (Yes you Chevy's!) is packed out and you can't get a taxi for love nor money. So I decided to blog not about what I did at the conference but the evening events.

This year I arrived late Monday evening, flying in from a family vacation in the UK and missing the AppsLab event at 21st Amendment. I was disappointed especially as it was me who recommended that bar to Jake as it does some of the finest beer in the City and I like hanging out there - Of course meeting Jake and Anthony from Appslab is always enjoyable.

Tuesday I was hanging out at the W Hotel and I stumbled upon a few interesting people from My Virtual Lab. They have an interesting beta available which I haven't had a chance to fully road test but looks pretty useful at first glance. I also got a free T-Shirt, I normally shun 'freebie fashion' as frankly free T-Shirts are only fit for giving to relatives to sleep or work out in, but the My Virtual Lab dudes do have a very cool logo.

my-virtual-lab.jpg

Wednesday was party night, when we get to see which acts need cash this year, if Elton John is reading this I may get hit with a Law suit. Oracle employee passes do not get a conference ticket, which may explain to many attendees why the people on the demo pods are always asking if you have a spare wristband. The first problem was getting to the Cow Palace, the line at the Moscone was insane, so I jumped in a Limo splitting the cost ($40 - bargain) with a similarly frustrated dba - get there fast and make a new friend, I highly recommend it. The thing that amazes me about these parties is how I can see so few people I know despite half of Oracle being there - I suspect they see me coming and avoid me, but can't be certain. Anyway I have to confess I left early, grabbing a big handful of Strawberries for my 2 year old on the way out. I saw a little of Lenny Kravitz, eat some nice food but there is a limit to how long I can hang around drinking Bud from a plastic cup.

I did go back to the W Hotel for a few drinks Wednesday and met a group of people who had just finished some financial reporting class in a college around the corner. When I was a student, I didn't hang out in bars with prices like the W, a round there would have cleaned me out for the entire term, times must have changed. I was also surprised that there was anyone there not associated with Open World, but I had a great chat with one guy about the similarities between some of the Web 2.0 hype and the dotcom boom, even if some of the people there said they were too young to really remember the dotcom era. Feeling old I went home and decided to stay in Thursday evening and fall asleep on the sofa, blaming it on Jet Lag and not my age.

So the roads are all open now and life in SOMA gets back to normal - here's to next year.