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Wednesday, September 1, 2010

In your company, when does inventory management start?

It’s not a trick question. The requirement to manage inventory has to start somewhere.

courtesy of Intermec
Does it start when a customer places an order?  Maybe.

Does it start when someone checks to see if the items ordered by the customer are in Stock?  Possible.

Does it start when manufacturing sends in a purchase request for raw materials or components? Could be a possibility.

Does it start when an order is placed with the supplier for raw materials, finished goods or components needed to fill a customer order? What about a manufacturing order to build to stock? Interesting.

Does it start when the shipment arrives at the Receiving door and each item is checked against the order? That sounds right.

Does it start when the items are moved out of Receiving to another location? Definitely part of the inventory process.

Does it start when the finished goods are moved into customer inventory? Has to be in there somewhere

Does it end when the customer order is filled and shipped? Or does that start the cycle over again? Hmmm?

Does your inventory management system work the way you want it to? Is it as accurate as you need it to be? Is inventory movement accounted for from end to end?  What about the Lot Numbers?

A True Story:

On a recent visit to a manufacturer, the supervisor pointed to a forklift carrying a pallet of raw materials between buildings. In the breezeway the operator stopped and placed the pallet on the floor and drove off.

“That probably came from Receiving,” he said, “Sure, we know it arrived. Somebody checked it in receiving and sent this driver with instructions to “put it someplace,” which he did. But I know from past history that our system doesn’t know where it is. It knows it arrived, but it doesn’t know where it went. As far as the system is concerned, this pallet is still located in Receiving. The reason is that the breezeway between buildings isn’t a location in our system where we store received materials. Unless that driver comes back later to pick it up, it will stay here until somebody ‘finds’ it.”

Does inventory ever get found? “Not often enough.”

The answer is a robust inventory management system that accurately checks items against outstanding orders as they are received and then tracks every movement of that inventory from Receiving to Staging to Quality Inspection to Inventory to Manufacturing to Finished Goods to Customer Order to Ship Staging and then to the Customer.

If your inventory management system doesn’t track inventory the way you need it to be tracked, what you don’t know can cost you.


A3 Technologies is software developer and systems integrator serving the manufacturing, distribution and warehousing markets. The company has carefully designed an inventory and warehouse management system – Fontana IMS – that warehouses, manufacturers and distributors can utilize to address inventory movement and other issues.

For more information, please E-mail us at sales@a3-tech.com or call us toll free
at 888-461-4222 or visit our website at www.a3-tech.com

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Coping With Strict Pallet Labeling Requirements?

Is your company forced to comply with exacting pallet label printing and placement requirements like these?

Label Format:
SUPPLIER shall print 4 in. x 6 in. labels in portrait orientation. Bar code symbology used on the label shall be Codabar printed with a narrow bar of .0075 in. in width maximum. Bar coded information will be placed as specified on the label. Labels shall be printed using the direct thermal transfer process in black on a white background (no substitutes are permitted).

Label Position on Pallets:
All shipments from SUPPLIER must be on standard 48 x 48 wooden shipping pallets. No exceptions will be permitted. Shipping labels must be affixed to pallets as follows: The label shall be positioned 6 in. above the level of the floor and 2.75 in. from the right hand leading edge of the pallet; one label shall be placed in this position on each of the four sides of the pallet.

Penalty for Non-Compliance:
Failure to comply with these directions will result penalties assessed to the SUPPLIER for orders received with non-compliant labels (including positioning). XYZ Company shall determine compliance with these directives upon receipt of shipments from SUPPLIER.


How bad could the penalty be? One well-known retailer deducts 3% of the shipment’s value (not the pallet’s) from the manufacturers invoice.

That hurts!

What can you do? As they say, a picture is worth 1,000 words.

Is there a way to prove compliance with strict labeling requirements?

For information about how Fontana IMS Linked-2 can help you meet strict compliance labeling directives, call 888-461-4222, e-mail us at sales@a3-tech.com, or visit our website at www.A3-Tech.com.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

A3 Technologies Certifies Intermec CK3 for Fontana IMS

courtesy of Intermec


The Intermec CK3, a wireless data collection terminal that uses the Windows Mobile 6.1 client, has been added to the broad family of mobile computers, desktop and portable printers certified by A3 Technologies for use on the company’s inventory and warehouse management software, Fontana IMS.


for complete article click here



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Thursday, July 22, 2010

The Digital Camera “Work Around”

Top 5 reasons using a digital camera isn’t a good work around in the warehouse:


5. “Anybody seen the camera?”

4. “Darn, the batteries are dead.”

3. “Does anyone know how to plug this into the PC?”

2. “Jimmy! Didn’t know you drove a Harley! Sweet! Get a shot of me on it!”

And the # 1 reason a digital camera isn’t a good workaround in the warehouse?

“Does anyone remember which pictures go with which shipment?”

Is there a better way to get images of damaged freight?

You bet there is: On-line and in real-time with Fontana IMS from A3 Technologies.

To learn more, call A3 Technologies at 888-461-4222,
e-mail us at sales@a3-tech.com,
or visit our website at http://www.a3-tech.com/.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

COMMITMENT TO QUALITY

WHAT FEDEX CAN TEACH INVENTORY MANAGERS

COMMITMENT TO QUALITY

It’s funny, but many companies treat quality as a given. “We deliver quality.” “Our products are the ¬highest quality.” “Quality is our only job.”

Even in their “mission statement” has the obligatory commitment to quality. “We strive to deliver products and services that set new standards for quality.” “Our mission is to raise the bar in quality products and services.” “We are committed to the highest quality standards.”
An east Tennessee friend calls statements like these “Chin Music.”

It’s not a complement.

Quality is not “chin music” at FedEx. FedEx is obsessed with delivering quality at every level.

One FedEx poster says it all: “IF we are satisfied with delivering just 99.9% of our packages on-time every day, 8 million packages a year won’t get there when we said they would.”

Getting it right 99.9% of the time is unacceptable.

Quality improves performance. Did you know that FedEx couriers have a set procedure for entering and exiting their trucks? It is the most efficient way to get in or out of a vehicle and it also is the safest. The reason is simple: Drivers who are injured cannot deliver packages. Drivers who do not lock their doors have their packages stolen.
FedEx drivers seldom get injured and they don’t get their packages stolen. They follow the procedure without fail. And they practice it in competitions.

Over the years FedEx has spent millions of dollars and man-hours developing and implementing LEAN and Six Sigma improvements. The result is a level of quality from one end of the organization to the other. What’s startling is that the process of improving quality never stops. Employees are encouraged to develop new and better ways to get their job done. They are driven to eliminate wasted time, wasted motion, wasted effort. Everything is documented, reviewed, tested and analyzed before it’s put into the operations manual.

Is your inventory management system designed around delivering quality?

How are orders for raw materials generated? Entered? Verified? Routed? Received? What causes a received item to be flagged for Quality Inspection? How is it tracked from receiving, to quality and into stock? Is item put away developed so the operator is routed to the correct location? Does your system automatically cycle count inventory locations at put away or at picking? Is your warehouse organized so the highest volume inventory, whether for customer orders or manufacturing are located at the point nearest where they will be used?

Going back to the previous article on Custodial Possession, do your warehouse employees feel a sense of ownership and obligation in completing their tasks and delivering the highest possible quality result?

Coming up next: TOTAL CUSTOMER SATISFACTION: THE MOTOROLA REVOLUTION

Thursday, July 1, 2010

WHAT FEDEX CAN TEACH INVENTORY MANAGERS - A SENSE OF URGENCY

Have you ever sat in line at the drive-in waiting for someone, anyone, to ask you for your order? Look at what is happening: The reason you’re in the drive-in line is you’re in a hurry. You don’t have time to park your car, go in, wait for a waiter to bring you a menu, look at the menu, wait for the waiter to come back, order your meal, wait for it, eat it, wait for the check, pay for it and leave.
No, you’re in a hurry, yet there you sit, waiting for someone to ask “May I take your order?” You have a sense of urgency. The person on the other end of the intercom? Not so much.

Just about everywhere you go these days there seems doesn’t seem to be a sense of urgency. Maybe the reason for that goes something like this: “I get paid for being here 8 hours, not for how much work I do.” Another one goes like this: “I’m busy. They can wait.”
To make matters worse the places where you find a lack of a sense of urgency part of the reason is that it’s communicated to employees by their managers. You ask to see the manager to complain and ten minutes later he or she appears. You, and by extrapolation, other customers, are not a priority, therefore no sense of urgency to respond.

Not at FedEx.

The first day I met the Director of Courier Operations at FedEx I noticed a sign on his desk: “If we don’t do our job today, we’ll be out of business tomorrow.” And he believed it. Fail to pick up and deliver packages on time, especially when your motto is “It’s there by 10:30 or it’s free” and you quite possibly could be out of business in a day.

It wasn’t the only place I saw that sign. It was everywhere.

There is no company I know of that is more clock conscious than FedEx, and there is just one clock: The digital clock in every building, in every office, on every wall, counting down in hours, minutes and seconds, the time left before aircraft must be in the air to deliver their packages on time the next day.

That clock does more than let everyone know how much time is left to do their job. It creates a sustained sense of urgency because without it FedEx could never achieve their goal: Deliver those packages by 10:30 AM tomorrow. No one at FedEx puts it off until tomorrow.

Does your order entry, receiving, put away, picking, ship staging and shipping pulse with a sense of urgency? Are orders routed and prioritized for efficient picking? Do order pickers move swiftly and surely through the warehouse as they pick inventory for shipment? Is your inventory mapped so the most frequently ordered items and most urgent items are closest to shipping? Do your employees and managers share a sense of urgency?

That sense of urgency at FedEx creates an environment for building teamwork: Everyone knows what they have to do and they know they can’t do it all themselves. The only way to succeed every day is to not just work together, but find better ways to work together.

If you want to gain a unique competitive advantage over your rivals, nothing beats a sense of urgency and making it part of your culture.

Next up: COMMITMENT TO QUALITY

Monday, June 28, 2010

WHAT FEDEX CAN TEACH INVENTORY MANAGERS

Though it seems like yesterday, it was really more than 20 years ago that Federal Express came into my life in a big way. I took on FedEx as a customer and kept them as a customer for over 17 years. Working side-by-side with their people taught me a lot, and I learned firsthand what made FedEx so successful. Guess what? Almost all of the things that make FedEx successful can be applied to any company in any market.

CUSTODIAL POSSESSION

Strange at it may seem, FedEx became successful not because they guaranteed package delivery by 10:30 AM the next day, but from the application of a single revolutionary concept throughout the entire organization. That concept is known as Custodial Possession. It can be described this way: Once we pick it up, it isn’t YOUR package; it becomes OUR package. That makes US responsible for keeping up with it until it is delivered. WE have to do whatever we can to make sure OUR package is delivered.

Custodial Possession didn’t stop with the couriers, sort hub employees, pilots or drivers. It could be found throughout the company. Everybody from customer service operators, dispatchers, computer operators, network managers, even engineers knew that they played a role in delivering OUR packages on time.

That was a radical departure from the philosophy and business practices of other delivery companies.

Why would a concept like Custodial Possession be relevant to a warehouse manager or a manufacturer? Because there is a subtle difference between how you treat what’s yours and how you treat what’s not.

Talk to anyone who rents things from cars to apartments to TV’s and they all tell you the same thing: Nobody dishes out abuse like someone who doesn't "own" the item.

And it’s true. Rental cars with dirty diapers piled deep in the back seat of a returned car. Coffee stains on rugs. Bathroom fixtures ripped from the wall. Picture tubes smashed. The reason? An underlying feeling that because it’s not “MINE” someone else is responsible.

If it’s not MY car, then YOU are responsible for keeping it clean. If it’s not MY package, then YOU are responsible for getting it delivered. If it’s not MY inventory, then YOU are responsible for how it’s received, put away, picked or shipped.

Fred Smith realized for millions of packages to be delivered by 10:30 AM the next business day, everyone at FedEx had to be convinced that every package picked up, loaded on a plane, ran through the sorting system, loaded on the outbound plane, put on a truck and delivered was “MY” package. Delivering MY package overrides everything else.

It works. That commitment to delivering MY package is best illustrated by a story.

During my time working with FedEX, I saw a package get bumped off the sort conveyer. It was found and brought to the sort manager. (BTW, at the end of every sort the entire hub and flight line is inspected from top to bottom and end to end to locate any packages that may have been bumped off.)

The sort manager at FedEx didn’t have to think about it. He bought a first class ticket on the next commercial flight out to the destination city, put an employee on the plane with the package who then hand delivered it to the recipient. And it was delivered before 10:30 AM.

So, what does Custodial Possession have to do with inventory? Well, think about what happens to all those packages. An order is given for delivery. The item is picked up and delivered to the warehouse where it is received, accounted for and sorted. Then another order has it picked for pre-ship preparation, then it's moved to shipping, put on a vehicle which then delivers the item to the customer. At each step of the way, FedEx knows exactly where it is, where it's been and where it's going.

Do your warehouse operators, procurement managers and customer service people treat inventory as though it were THEIRS? Is everyone committed to making sure that inventory is ordered in the right quantities and delivered before it’s needed to fill orders or to move into manufacturing? Is it received carefully and checked against outstanding orders to ensure quantities and part numbers are right? Is inventory staged in such a way that put away can be done quickly and items made available for customer orders or movement to manufacturing quickly?

Or does inventory get a “lick and a promise” as my grandmother used to say?

When it comes time to fill a customer order, do your systems and processes ensure that the right product in the right quantities are picked, then carefully packed for shipment? Does your inventory management process make sure that not only what is being shipped is being shipped the way the customer wants it and when the customer needs it?

If you want to gain an unfairl competitive advantage, don’t emulate your competition, think about Custodial Possession and use it to set the bar way up high and keep it there. FedEx did and look where they are today.

Next Up: A SENSE OF URGENCY

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Gloom and Doom for WMS?

In his June 15, 2010, editorial, Bob Trebilcock, Executive Editor of Modern Materials Handling said:


“The warehouse management system market is still a $1 billion market … but it was hardest hit among these three core applications (WMS, TMS, RFID).

Why the big drop? Just as end users are getting more mileage out of their lift trucks and conveyor systems in this recession, they’re probably thinking twice about upgrading or replacing a WMS system unless they have to.

Does a WMS deliver real results? Absolutely. But I think many users are going to try to make due for now.”

So, if you’re a WMS systems developer or integrator, the future must look pretty bleak right now.

Or does it?

True, a lot of companies in distribution and manufacturing implemented new ERP systems in the mid-2000’s. True, a lot of companies are “keeping it close to the vest” when it comes to anything new, not just WMS. And true, a lot of companies are in the “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” mode.

So why should manufacturers and distributors be bullish on implementing a WMS right now?

Time, competition, green initiatives and price.

TIME.
The downturn in the economy has given a lot of companies time to flush their inventories. It doesn’t matter whether the inventory is raw materials or components used in manufacturing or items on the shelf waiting for orders from customers, smart operators squeezed the pipeline in an effort to drive inventories throughout the supply chain down.

With inventories at record lows, they now have the time to look at the benefits they can get by implementing a WMS. Why? So they can continue to manage inventories at the lowest possible levels in the future. The smart operators know that they have the give of time to look at and implement a WMS that will give them greater control over their inventories.

COMPETITION.

Believe it or not, a lot of companies see this gift of time as an opportunity to gain a competitive advantage. Think of this: Going from paper orders to automated order entry eliminates errors, which eliminated picking errors, which eliminates shipping errors which creates happy customers. Competitive advantage.

Instituting automated cycle counting and min/max quantities based on order lead times, purchasing trends and quantity discounts, ensures materials needed for shipment or manufacturing are available when they are needed and in the right quantities to fill orders. The result? Lower inventory costs, which falls right to the “P” side of ledger.

Implementing real-time, wireless automated data collection from receiving through to shipping not only increases accuracy, but speeds order processing as well. End result? Increased productivity which means doing more with the same or fewer numbers of workers. Another competitive advantage.

Know what we call competitive advantage? Profit.

GO GREEN.

Everyone remembers the commercial where the group is sitting around a conference table trying to come up with ideas that will save $13 million dollars. One guy finally pipes up: “How much does all of this cost?” he says as he waves his hand across a table laden with charts, reports, printouts, graphs and books. “Could be millions” says the overwrought executive.

Is millions. Not could be. Is.

Paper is dangerous. It can be lost, misplaced, torn, faded, misfiled or shredded. Yet it is the blood that pumps through the veins of every company in the world. Smart operators are looking at the paper generated throughout the customer order, purchasing, receiving, manufacturing, quality control, put away, picking, staging and shipping process. Why? Because most of it is so unnecessary. With the right WMS system, like A3 Technologies Fontana IMS, paper is replaced with images, images that can be accessed by whoever needs them instantly. No more waiting for the inter office mail. No more “50 copies and a distribution list.” The WMS system eliminates paper and helps the company go green at the same time.

PRICE.

The relative cost to implement a fully integrated WMS system has been falling and is at its lowest point in years. Smart operators know that as the economy picks up, so will demand for WMS and so will the price. Now is the time to look at a WMS system that can deliver what they want, the way they want it and at a price they can afford.

To learn more, contact A3 Technologies about Fontana IMS.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Fontana™ IMS Automates Six Sigma Process Improvements

    Automating Six Sigma Process Improvements multiplies the bottom line benefits say the experts.

    At the core of Six Sigma is the concept of continuous process improvement which can be measured in terms of higher quality products - evidenced by reduced customer service and warranty costs, elimination of waste and improved productivity through the elimination of unnecessary processes and procedures.

    At the same time, Six Sigma defines Value Added Activities those items a customer is willing to pay for in the finished product. Everything else that is done in the manufacturing, storage, distribution and even sale of the product that does not add value to the product in the view of the customer can be (and should be) considered waste.

    Eliminating that waste means simplifying, reducing or integrating activities to increase the value add, reduce costs and result in improved bottom line performance.

    When a continuous improvement mindset is fostered and nurtured by employees at all levels, the result is a sense of ownership and accomplishment. When employees are actively engaged in identifying and eliminating unnecessary processes, workplace improvements happen faster and are more easily implemented.

    See how A3's Fontana IMS automates Six Sigma process improvements from the receiving door through order fulfillment.

    Monday, March 1, 2010

    White Paper Part Two: Digital Imaging in Manufacturing

    A new White Paper is available on the A3 website.

    "The immediacy of digital imaging, not to mention the quality, has lent itself to hundreds of practical applications ranging from analyzing MRI’s to assisting in police work to being part of the evening newscast.

    •In police work, digital images taken at crime scenes can be quickly transmitted to other law enforcement agencies and forensic specialists for immediate analysis.

    •Digital images produced by an MRI can be shared on-line with specialists around the globe to assist with a diagnosis and prepare a course of treatment.

    •Images captured at events on the other side of the world are instantly ready for publication in hundreds of news outlets just moments after they are captured.

    With the number of practical applications growing each year, why hasn’t digital imaging caught on in manufacturing or distribution?

    A quick answer might be that there aren’t any real applications for digital imaging in those industries.
    That answer may be quick, but it’s wrong..."

    Go to the White Papers section of our website for more about this story.

    A3 Technologies, Inc. is a systems integrator. We are in the business of developing and delivering supply chain management solutions to customers in the distribution, warehousing and manufacturing markets. Our flagship software, Fontana IMS, is a fully automated, error-free, end-to-end inventory management solution developed specifically for those markets.



    For more information: Shalonda Williams, A3 Technologies Tel: (704) 708-3871 Fax: (704) 708-8557 Email: sales@a3-tech.com

    Website: http://www.a3-tech.com/

    Tuesday, February 9, 2010

    VIDEO: Fontana™ IMS



    A3 Technologies Introduces Fontana™ IMS. Fontana™ IMS is designed to streamline the inventory management process and facilitate implementation of Lean and Six Sigma process improvements. Using bar-code recognition to ensure accuracy, Fontana™ IMS also implements Honeywell imaging technology to add a new level of accountability. The Fontana™ IMS server and client software dynamically links images to orders and makes them instantly available to management. As an added benefit, Fontana™ IMS technologies can be integrated into existing ERP systems such as Oracle, SAP, QuickBooks and others.

    Wednesday, February 3, 2010

    A3 Technologies Launches Inventory Management System at Honeywell 2010 Solutions Fair

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

    Orlando, FL, January 19, 2010 – A3 Technologies, Inc., a leading systems integrator and Authorized Honeywell ISV, launched their new inventory management software system, Fontana™ IMS, at the 2010 Honeywell Scanning & Mobility Solutions Fair in Orlando, FL. The new software, developed for the distribution, warehousing and manufacturing markets, features wireless, real-time inventory management using Honeywell mobile terminals.

    Fontana™ IMS is designed to streamline the inventory management process and facilitate implementation of Lean and Six Sigma process improvements. Using bar-code recognition to ensure accuracy, Fontana™ IMS also implements Honeywell imaging technology to add a new level of accountability. The Fontana™ IMS server and client software dynamically links images to order and makes them instantly available to management. As an added benefit, Fontana™ IMS technologies can be integrated into existing ERP systems by Oracle, SAP, QuickBooks and others.

    “With Fontana™ IMS, Honeywell now has a real-time inventory management solution for the manufacturing, distribution and warehousing markets,” said Alan Morris, Vice President of Business Development for A3 Technologies. “The Solutions Fair allowed us the opportunity to formally launch our Fontana™ Inventory Management System to a key player in the market. A3 Technologies solution can be the vehicle to drive increased sales of Honeywell Scanning and Mobility products through their channels.”

    Joe Zvanut 704-708-3880
    Director of Sales and Marketing
    A3 Technologies, Inc
    jmzvanut@a3-tech.com
    Fax: 704-708-3557
    A3 Technologies, Inc

    Tuesday, February 2, 2010

    Honeywell Scanning & Mobility Showcases Dolphin 9700 Mobile Computer

    Honeywell Scanning & Mobility launched its Dolphin 9700 mobile computer at the NRF Big Show 2010 in New York City. The rugged handheld computer supports 3.5G GSM/HSDPA, 802.11 a/b/g, Bluetooth, IrDA, and GPS.
    Additionally, the unit features Honeywell's Adaptus Imaging Technology 5.5 which reads linear and 2-D bar codes, captures digital images, and enables electronic signature capture, enabling workers to do more with a single device.
    Finally, the unit also sports a color camera with Automated Programming Control, which provides integration of color picture and video capture into business applications.

    Thursday, January 28, 2010

    Intermec GSS Partner Summit

    A3 Technologies demonstrated their Fontana™ Inventory Management System at the Intermec GSS Partner Summit in Orlando, Florida on February 8th - 10th. Visitors were able to see:
    • Rea- time inventory management system
    • Automated data entry and inventory verification
    • Elimination of paper-based processes
    • Fully integrated document and digital imaging
    • Automation of Lean Manufacturing and 6 Sigma Process Improvements
    • Automated Kitting and Replenishment
    • Integration with ERP systems (SAP, Oracle, etc.)
    • Real-time cycle count

    Location: Rosen Shingle Creek
    When: 2/8/2010 - 2/10/2010
    City: Orlando
    State: FL

    Thursday, January 21, 2010

    VIDEO: Imaging Technology for the Warehouse

    A3 Technologies was invited to attend a Visualization Technology Symposium at Fayetteville Tech Community College. At the close of the symposium, Alan Morris,VP of A3 Technologies, explores ideas and applications for 3d applications within the inventory management and warehousing systems.

    Wednesday, January 20, 2010

    Dolphin 9700 Mobile Computer


    Honeywell’s Dolphin® 9700 rugged digital assistant maximizes worker
    productivity and reduces operating costs by providing reliable and easyto-
    use multi-modal communication and data collection.
    Real-time communication is critical in today’s fast-paced global business
    environment. Mobile workers can perform a multitude of tasks on the
    Dolphin 9700, including business computing, e-mail, instant messaging,
    web browsing, voice calls, bar code scanning, picture taking, video
    recording, GPS tracking, and vehicle navigation. This consolidation
    of hardware simplifies workflow and significantly reduces expenses.
    High-speed wireless technology—3.5G GSM/HSDPA, 802.11 a/b/g,
    Bluetooth®, IrDA and GPS—connects companies to customers and
    workers, regardless of location.
    The Dolphin 9700 maximizes worker productivity and comfort by
    providing an optimized user interface and system performance. Its
    contoured industrial design is easy to handle and provides a secure
    grip. A large 3.7” high-resolution VGA display ensures easy data
    interaction in any environment. An angled imager with ergonomic
    scan keys enables rapid, fatigue-free scanning, while a full QWERTY
    keyboard with enhanced navigation keys facilitates intuitive data
    input. Honeywell’s Shift-PLUSTM power management system ensures
    continuous operation throughout an entire work shift, resulting in a lower
    total cost of ownership.
    Automated intelligent multi-media technology enhances device utility.
    Adaptus® Imaging Technology 5.5 is paired with a fully-programmable
    color camera which allows enterprises to easily incorporate data, image
    and video capture into new or existing business applications, creating
    additional value which improves the bottom line.

    Honeywell

    Monday, January 4, 2010

    A3 Technologies Achieves Signature Level ISV Status with Honeywell

    Charlotte-based A3 Technologies Inc., a systems integrator of inventory management and tracking systems, announces its Honeywell ISV status.

    A3 Technologies is pleased to be approved as a Honeywell Signature Level Independent Software Vendor. A3 Technologies, an established software developer and systems integrator for the manufacturing, distribution and warehousing markets recently announced the introduction of Fontana IMS.

    The inaugural product uses state-of-the-art wireless bar code data collection systems to deliver accurate data to customer’s ERP systems (such as SAP, Oracle and others) or to act as a standalone system. As a Signature Level Independent Software Vendor, A3 Technologies can work with other Honeywell partners to activate Lean Manufacturing and Six Sigma Process Improvements at companies of all sizes. Scalable and affordable, Fontana IMS delivers the high levels of inventory accountability demanded by customers.

    A3 Technologies, Inc. is a systems integrator of inventory management and tracking systems; developing, deploying and servicing wireless productivity solutions using innovative software applications for portable barcode devices, desktops, and servers. A3 provides customer-specific solutions in manufacturing, transportation, logistics, route accounting, healthcare, and other industries.

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