MONTREAL, QC, October 16, 2012 (Press-News.org) SGI Group Inc. today announced that its DMS Collaborative Documents solution version 1.0 has achieved SAP certification as powered by the SAP NetWeaver technology platform. The solution has been proven to integrate with SAP solutions and provides highly flexible workflow processes for managing the lifecycle of document management system (DMS) documents.
The SAP Integration and Certification Center (SAP ICC) has certified that DMS Collaborative Documents 1.0 integrates with SAP NetWeaver 700 as an add-on to the ABAP programming language for the SAP ERP 6.0 application via the ABAP add-on integration scenario. DMS Collaborative Documents is a generic workflow solution that helps customers uniformly streamline the processes of managing documents during their lifecycle. This enables full automation of processes that can lead to improved performance.
"Achieving this certification underscores SGI Group's position as a key player in building workflow solutions in support of SAP applications," said J. Benthami, chief solution architect, SGI Group. "Using our new DMS Collaborative Documents solution together with SAP ERP will offer customers an opportunity to experience immediate return on their investments."
The DMS Collaborative Documents solution offers high flexibility, allowing customers to incorporate rules for determining agents to receive business tasks. It can be used for any possible workflow scenario to manage DMS documents. By implementing the solution, customers can further minimize the risk, effort and related costs involved in designing and implementing custom solutions.
In addition, SGI Group has joined the SAP PartnerEdge program as an SAP software solution and technology partner. Through the program, partners work closely with SAP to develop and certify the technical integration of their solutions with SAP software. Integrated partner applications extend, complement and add value to SAP solutions, thereby helping mutual customers more successfully meet business needs and drive strong results.
About SGI Group
SGI Group Inc. is an enterprise solutions company that specializes in building workflow solutions in support of SAP solutions.
SAP, SAP NetWeaver, ABAP, PartnerEdge and all SAP logos are trademarks or registered trademarks of SAP AG in Germanyand in several other countries.
All other product and service names mentioned herein are the trademarks of their respective owners.
For more information, please contact:
Jalil Benthami
514 334 8706 (Ext 221)
info@groupe-sgi.com
http://www.groupe-sgi.com/cdoc-solution
http://ecohub.sap.com/catalog/#!solution:cdoc-solution
SGI Group Inc. is an enterprise solutions company that specializes in building workflow solutions in support of SAP solutions.
SGI Group's DMS Collaborative Documents 1.0 Solution Achieves SAP Certification as Powered by SAP NetWeaver
SGI Group's DMS Collaborative Documents solution is a generic workflow solution that helps customers uniformly streamline the processes of managing documents during their lifecycle.
2012-10-16
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Traumatic injury research working to improve the lives of citizens and soldiers
2012-10-15
NEW ORLEANS
— New studies presented today offer vivid examples of how advances in basic brain research help reduce the trauma and suffering of innocent landmine victims, amateur and professional athletes, and members of the military. The research was presented today at Neuroscience 2012, the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience and the world's largest source of emerging news about brain science and health.
From the playing field to the battlefield, neuroscientists are gaining better understanding of what happens to the brain when it suffers traumatic injury ...
An immunosuppressive drug could delay the onset of neurodegenerative diseases
2012-10-15
Rapamycin, a drug used to prevent rejection in transplants, could delay the onset of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. This is the main conclusion of a study published in the Nature in which has collaborated the researcher Isidro Ferrer, head of the group of Neuropathology at the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL) and the Bellvitge University Hospital and Full Professor of Pathological Anatomy at the University of Barcelona. The research was led by researchers from the International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA) in Trieste ...
Bicycle helmets prevent fatal head injuries
2012-10-15
Cyclists who died of a head injury were three times as likely to not be wearing a helmet compared with those who died of other injuries, according to a study in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
"We saw an association between dying as a result of sustaining head injury and not wearing a helmet," states Dr. Navindra Persaud, Keenan Research Centre and the Department of Family and Community Medicine, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, with coauthors. "These results are consistent with a protective effect of helmets on cycling deaths."
There is scant evidence ...
'Mother's kiss' safe and effective for removing foreign objects from children's noses
2012-10-15
A technique called the "mother's kiss" for removing foreign objects from the nasal passages of young children appears to be a safe and effective approach, found a study published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
"The mother's kiss appears to be a safe and effective technique for first-line treatment in the removal of a foreign body from the nasal cavity," writes Dr. Stephanie Cook, Buxted Medical Centre, Buxted, United Kingdom, with coauthors. "In addition, it may prevent the need for general anesthesia in some cases."
The technique, known since the ...
Scratching the surface of psoriasis
2012-10-15
Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disorder that affects approximately 2% of the world's population. A group of inflammatory molecules known as interleukins activate an immune response that causes itchy skin, but it is unclear how the skin cells and immune cells communicate. In a study published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers led by Manfred Kopf at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zürich, Switzerland found that mice lacking interleukin-36 (IL-36) were protected from immune-mediated skin inflammation. These results indicate that IL-36 ...
JCI early table of contents for Oct. 15, 2012
2012-10-15
Scratching the surface of psoriasis
Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disorder that affects approximately 2% of the world's population. A group of inflammatory molecules known as interleukins activate an immune response that causes itchy skin, but it is unclear how the skin cells and immune cells communicate. In a study published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers led by Manfred Kopf at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zürich, Switzerland found that mice lacking interleukin-36 (IL-36) were protected from immune-mediated skin inflammation. ...
Mice at risk of asthma, allergies can fight off skin cancer
2012-10-15
A molecule involved in asthma and allergies has now been shown to make mice resistant to skin cancer, according to scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
The molecule, called TSLP (thymic stromal lymphopoietin), is produced by damaged skin and activates the immune system. Chronic low levels of TSLP are suspected in making the immune system oversensitive to what should be a harmless environment, leading to the skin rashes and overproduction of mucus common in allergies and asthma.
"But at extremely high levels, TSLP appears to train the ...
New approaches in the treatment of alcohol dependence
2012-10-15
"Addiction is a brain disease" was the title of an editorial in the renowned journal "Science" 15 years ago. The author argued that recognising addiction as a disorder of the brain can impact society´s overall health and social policy strategies and help diminish the health and social costs associated with drug abuse and addiction (Leshner, 1997). Such a presentation of the complex concept of addiction was revolutionary, as social and psychological aspects were largely considered as the most important, although not the only ones involved.
Some years later, clinicians ...
Study sheds light on role of exercise and androgens such as testosterone on nerve damage repair
2012-10-15
A study by researchers from Emory University and Indiana University found that the beneficial effects daily exercise can have on the regeneration of nerves also require androgens such as testosterone in both males and females. It is the first report of both androgen-dependence of exercise on nerve regeneration and of an androgenic effect of exercise in females.
"The findings will provide a basis for the development of future treatment strategies for patients suffering peripheral nerve injuries," said Dale Sengelaub, professor in the Department of Psychological and Brain ...
University of Tennessee study confirms solar wind as source for moon water
2012-10-15
Three years ago University of Tennessee, Knoxville, researchers helped to discover water on the surface of the moon. Now, they are piecing together the origin of that water: solar wind.
A new study confirms solar wind as a source for water embedded in the lunar surface.
Solar wind is the continuous flow of charged particles from the sun. Scientists have speculated it to be responsible for water on the surface of the moon.
Last year Larry Taylor, distinguished professor in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, confirmed comets as the source for water ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Be Well Texas at UT Health San Antonio to lead major statewide expansion of opioid use disorder and recovery services
Freshwater fish, too, attracted to artificial root structures
In hard-to-treat form of tuberculosis, shorter, gentler therapy shows unequal benefit
Warming oceans a turn-off for female Critically Endangered sharks
University of Surrey launches Space Institute to drive the UK's small satellite boom and tackle urgent global challenges
Look to the data, not the marketing: Turfgrass research shows no differences in ‘penetrant’ and ‘retainer’ wetting agents
New organ recovery technique could make more heart transplants available
NCSA supporting Georgia Tech in new AI venture
Revised, more accurate Baltic ringed seal count – Hunting slows population growth
Eight babies born after Mitochondrial Donation treatment to reduce transmission of mitochondrial DNA disease
Music may reduce distress for dementia patients
The American Ornithological Society announces its 2025 research grantees
Fetal exposure to vape liquids linked to changes in skull shape
Did a meteor impact trigger a landslide in the Grand Canyon?
Study suggests some maternal HIV infections may be missed during pregnancy
Bacterial genomes hold clues for creating personalized probiotics
Rice University scientists discover way to engineer stronger soft devices through smarter silicone bonding
Innovation Crossroads welcomes six entrepreneurs for Cohort 2025
Researchers explore ways to better safeguard romaine supply
Spider’s visual trickery can fool AI
During pregnancy, are newer antiseizure medications safer than older drugs?
Do race and ethnicity play a role in a person’s risk of peripheral neuropathy?
Older adults who increased their regular walking pace by just 14 steps per minute were more likely to experience clinically significant improvements in a test of aerobic capacity and walking endurance
For adults with hearing loss, linear amplification (amplification across all sound levels, available with some hearing aids) might restore their ability to recognize emotion in voices
Self-reporting climate anxiety in the United States is linked to being young, female, believing climate change will impact you personally, and more frequent media and community discussions around clim
A “silent epidemic” of stimulant use is shadowing the most recent opioid epidemic
Food insecurity causes anxiety and depression
New approach to kidney transplant matching could lead to better long-term outcomes
The patterns of elites who conceal their assets offshore
Elephant robot demonstrates bioinspired 3D printing technology
[Press-News.org] SGI Group's DMS Collaborative Documents 1.0 Solution Achieves SAP Certification as Powered by SAP NetWeaverSGI Group's DMS Collaborative Documents solution is a generic workflow solution that helps customers uniformly streamline the processes of managing documents during their lifecycle.