T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
657.1 | There's a lot of interest in this | WARNUT::JACKSON | Tony, Warrington UK | Wed May 23 1990 11:15 | 5 |
| I believe the person dealing with Trifox is Chuck BANZAI::STATA.
Try contacting him.
Tony J.
|
657.2 | TRIFOX Update | SUBWAY::FRIEDMAN | a good slice of 3.14159265358979323846264338327950... | Thu May 24 1990 15:51 | 45 |
| Zahir,
Jay Wang and I hosted the Trifox president, Su Lin, the
vice-president of marketing, J. Brian Skone and Dave Mumms from
the Center for Migration Services (DEC) here at NYO for the
past 3 days. Perhaps I can be of some assistance.
The product set is in 3 parts:
TRIM/APP - SQL*Forms like application development package.
Benefits include greater flexibility for triggering, buffered data
access, more efficient use of locking, simple "C"-like imbedded
procedural trigger language.
TRIM/RPT - SQL*Report like report generator. Benefits
include the above as well as consistency in user interface.
TRIP/TRANSLATE - Conversion program to automate conversion
from SQL*Forms to TRIM/APP. Can perform 80-90% of logic
translation and 90-95% of look and feel translation.
Major benefit is that the first two products access Rdb, Sybase or
ORACLE database formats (RMS will be available end of June).
Product is written in C and is available VAX/VMS,SUN,DOS,IBM (most
environments) and OS2 (other environments available at request.)
Dave Mumms and Tom Koski at the CMS are putting together the
logistics for Digital to sell the product. Trifox is a software
development company. They make the software but use big companies
as their sales channel. ( They used ORACLE to market their QMX
report/query product. )
We are developing internal expertise to provide technical support
locally. Dave has developed expertise to start support on a more
national level.
If you need further information -technical specs, positioning,
whatever, please contact me:
James N. Friedman
(212) 856-2108
(DTN) 352-2108
(No All-in-1)
2 Penn Plaza, 7th Floor
New York City, NY 10121
|
657.3 | Name Correction | SUBWAY::FRIEDMAN | a good slice of 3.14159265358979323846264338327950... | Fri May 25 1990 15:50 | 8 |
| >> Jay Wang and I hosted the Trifox president, Su Lin, the
>> vice-president of marketing, J. Brian Skone and Dave Mumms from
>> the Center for Migration Services (DEC) here at NYO for the
Make that Dave Munns, not Mumms. Sparkling he is, but I should get his
name correct.
James.
|
657.4 | Migration to DECforms? | DPDMAI::DAVISGB | Escapee from New Hampshire... | Tue May 29 1990 18:19 | 24 |
|
One caution with Trifox. Although they have what appears to be a great
product, and it will migrate a customer off of SQL*Forms to something
that runs on top of VAX Rdb, it still doesn't provide a conversion path
to a Digital strategic forms manager. When I first heard about Trifox
last september, the talk of the town was a DECforms conversion path by
January. I gave them the benefit of the doubt and predicted February.
Still no decforms conversion to DECforms at present. Of course, this
doesn't appear as a problem to Trifox, since it is their Trim*
application that the customer has migrated to. If we want to take an
application and migrate it from SQL*forms to DECforms, there
doesn't appear to be anything available. Where is the DECforms
conversion piece?
Better yet, where is the functionality that would allow one to create
a form with DECforms, and then query an Rdb database without having to
write 3gl code? (Like Dbase, SQL*forms, etc). Lack of THAT
functionality is what really kills us in competitive situations.
Cheers,
Gil
|
657.5 | Not really what you asked for | BEEZER::MAUFE | ____/^^^^\^/\/\^^^^________ | Wed Jun 06 1990 19:16 | 13 |
|
Gil, there is some software written by a SWS type in Hong Kong,
it goes the other way, from an Rdb database it generates a load
of DECforms that can use the database. It is called SQLGEN.
See note 407 in BANZAI::RDB_31 (kp 7 and all that)
Also Rally will be able to build a complete application from an
Rdb database in version 2.2. Enter rally, say build application
and voila! Lots of screens and menus!
Simon
|
657.6 | Trifox's Status | SUBWAY::WANG | | Mon Jan 21 1991 17:19 | 18 |
|
The agreement between DEC and Trifox is finally in place. Colorado's
Center for Migration Service now has the program to convert ORACLE
applications to run with Rdb/VMS. The contact is Tom Koski.
TRIM (Trifox's 4GL) is just one of many tools that works with Rdb/VMS.
Once ORACLE users convert to Rdb/VMS, we have the opportunities to sell
other products that works with Rdb/VMS. Products like Rally, Teamdata,
RdbExpert, ACMS, just to name a few. These opportunities can only
happen after the conversion. Is TRIM's ability to DECforms still that
important?
If the goal is to displace ORACLE in a account. I believe the strategy
is to migrate customers from ORACLE to rdb/VMS first. Like what IBM
tells its sales force, we most own the data (database) in order to have
account control.
Jay Wang
|
657.7 | Some customers prefer SQL*Forms | BROKE::THOMAS | | Tue Jan 22 1991 01:10 | 18 |
| re .4
Gil,
We have two strategic partners helping us convert from ORACLE to Rdb.
SmartStar will convert SQL*Forms applications into SmartStar
applications using DECforms.
Trifox will convert SQL*Forms applications into TRIM applications
using their own SQL*Forms-like forms system.
Although we'd like to convert all of our customers to our strategic
forms environment, many customers are rather attached to the SQL*Forms
environment. With this type of customer, TRIFOX provides a tremendous
advantage since they can convert the customer to Rdb, AND the customer
still has the look and feel of SQL*Forms. And, TRIM on Rdb runs
incredibly faster than SQL*Forms on ORACLE.
|
657.8 | More than look and feel! | SUBWAY::WANG | | Thu Jan 31 1991 01:12 | 8 |
| As far as I know Smartstar will only convert the look and feel, not the
SQL*FORMS triggers. SQL*FORMS triggers are the logic behind the
application. Trifox's conversion utility will convert most of the
SQL*FROMS triggers, which in my opinion is the advantage Trifox has
over Smartstar.
Jay Wang
|