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RE: (Sales)Web Forms and EDI

GEFEG supports Seeburger's efforts to help bring e-commerce to small and
medium enterprises (SME). GEFEG and Seeburger are global partners in
e-commerce.
Regards,
David Frenkel
Business Development
GEFEG USA
Global Leader in Ecommerce Tools
www.gefeg.com
425-260-5030
-----Original Message-----
From: Lewin. Scott [mailto:
Sent: Wednesday, October 30, 2002 5:10 AM
To: Chris Vanderwielen;
Subject: RE: [EDI-L] (Sales)Web Forms and EDI
SEEBURGER announces FREE WebEDI
SEEBURGER's iMartOne will be rolled out in Europe, supporting European
standards, followed by a rollout in the United States, supporting U.S.
standards.
Breakthrough for Total Business Integration in Retail
SEEBURGER launches free WebEDI portal iMartOne
SEEBURGER AG, a leading provider of business-to-business integration
solutions based in Bretten, Germany, launched at this year's ECR Day on
September 11-12, 2002 in Stuttgart a free WebEDI portal for consumer
goods and retail companies. This portal solution hosted by SEEBURGER
paves the way for seamless electronic management of business processes
and electronic linkage of partners with low data volumes. The
Bretten-based software company has thereby made a decisive contribution
toward implementing total business integration and achieving a sustained
cost reduction in the retail sector.
Large retail groups have sought for years to integrate business partners
with low data and transaction volumes electronically into their business
processes. The total business integration approach has for the most part
failed due to the cost. That changed; however, when SEEBURGER launched
its new WebEDI portal at this year's ECR Day. SEEBURGER offers consumer
goods manufacturers and retailers free use of a WebEDI portal specially
designed to meet industry requirements.
The range of functions that the portal offers corresponds to the
recommendations of the 'Centrale für Coorganisation' (CCG), the service
and competence center for the German consumer goods industry and
associated
economic sectors, and includes sector-specific transactions such as
orders, deliveries and invoices (Type 1 and 2 invoices as per CCG
recommendation, with Type 3 in preparation). Other functions include
compiling invoice lists, printing vouchers, and further sorting and
filter functions, etc. The portal solution is currently available in
German and English versions, but as SEEBURGER is keen to see it used all
over Europe, other versions can easily be added by means of language
tables.
As an integration platform the WebEDI portal is marketplace-capable and
offers the option of m:n relations between customers and suppliers. That
enables retail groups to map individual processes if required. WebEDI
data is relayed to retail groups free of charge via the portal in XML
format by SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol). Fees are charged only
for additional services or special functions such as extended archiving
or special transmission modes.
"If standards are adequate, no costs whatever are incurred by the
partners involved," says Bernd Seeburger, founder and CEO of SEEBURGER
AG. With the new solution, SEEBURGER offers a 100 percent supplier link
unrivalled by any other provider - from free WebEDI via a ready-to-run
EDI solution, the SmartRetailConnector, to cross-enterprise solutions
with the Business Integration Server. Customized Web applications and
automatic recognition and processing of paper vouchers with FAX2XML
complete the offering.
About SEEBURGER
SEEBURGER is a leading Business-to-Business Integration (B2Bi) provider
in the European market. Founded in 1986, it is a software company that
develops products and solutions to integrate processes with external
business partners in the context of collaborative commerce. The focus is
on integrating B2B solutions such as virtual marketplaces, portals,
e-procurement systems, Web solutions, EDI and XML into the cross-company
IT architecture. Software solutions from SEEBURGER are a promise of
automated integration and processing of B2B data that eliminates media
breaks.
www.seeburger.com <http://www.seeburger.com/>
-----Original Message-----
From: Chris Vanderwielen [mailto:
Sent: Thursday, October 17, 2002 4:26 PM
To:
Subject: [EDI-L] Web Forms and EDI
Hello all,
Does anyone out there have any experience using web forms and edi for
web-based purchasing? We're currently exploring various options for
web-based order entry. We have an in-house web front-end for use with
Baan,
but the behind the scenes scripting and hash converting has turned into
a
real nightmare, and I am not sure we can get it stable enough for use by
our
customers.
I'm curious how web-forms work. Do they basically replace the need for
your
trading partners to have an edi translator? Is the data from the form
exported to a file similair to the ones received from an 850 transaction
or
is XML the only way to retrieve the data?
Any insight would be appreciated.
Thanks
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