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Nov 19, 2007

Authorized training Centers of SAP in India

SAP has set up a community of Education Partners across India that offer well-designed and accessible training on SAP technologies. Prospective learners should always check the accreditation of any education centre prior to parting with any fees. SAP’s training partners in India are -

  • Siemens Information Systems Limited,
  • Genovate Solutions (I) Pvt. Ltd, Delphi Computech Pvt Ltd.,
  • VC ERP Consulting Pvt. Ltd,
  • Kauf Solutions India Pvt. Ltd,
  • Boston Software Consultants India Pvt Ltd,
  • BITECH and Cognizant Technology Solutions India Private Limited.

SAP training centres are located across India in Bangalore, Chennai, Delhi, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Mumbai,, Nasik, Mangalore, Mysore, Chandigarh, Vishakapatnam, Madurai, Cochin, and Coimbatore. Students can contact SAP at education.india@sap.com for any queries they might have.

Nov 18, 2007

what's the latest on the future of ABAP?

ABAP is not as dead as some might think.

At TechEd 2007, Vishal Sikka, SAP's chief technology officer, said that there are still 238 million lines of ABAP code in SAP. The message? ABAP is still entrenched in SAP, and SAP is still entrenched in ABAP. He also noted that while some new SAP programs are written in Java, some are written in ABAP too.

Some of the new NetWeaver PI (process integration) functionality was also written in ABAP. You may not see it when you work with PI, but the ABAP is there underneath, keeping things humming along. Some SAP representatives didn't even know whether ABAP was part of NetWeaver at this point, but the SAP Labs team assured me that it is.

Thomas Jung of SAP Labs, who writes a developers' blog on SDN (SAP Developers' Network), said some of the underlying NetWeaver functions were written in ABAP, and of course there is the Web Dynpro for ABAP. Jung also said that the ABAP Workbench is indeed part of NetWeaver and is being equipped with many of the bells and whistles that the Java side of NetWeaver is receiving.

So, although it's not going away anytime soon, we can't say that the ABAP outlook is dreamy. ABAP is still a valid part of the SAP landscape, but there's no question that when it comes to designing new enterprise services, Java is the language of choice in most cases.

On the other hand, we must remember the warning Sikka gave me during our interview: The entire SAP landscape is changing, and the emphasis on ABAP versus Java is not the right way to understand the transitions that are under way.

The design of the new enterprise service-oriented architecture (eSOA) NetWeaver development platform is specifically intended to make the programming language used irrelevant. The eSOA layer is designed to work with any open standard, so between eSOA and PI, programmers should be able to use their environment of choice and be interoperable with SAP.

Sikka went further, as did many executives, to stress that SAP's modeling tools (Visual Composer, the upcoming Aris for NetWeaver, as well as a new Eclipse modeling environment) are all designed to change the development process and emphasize the design of reusable components over arduous hand-coded customizations.

Soon, these modeling environments may even generate enough automated code to make it possible for the "Business Process Experts" of the future to do all the development work. Some have suggested that as much as 70% of all hand-coding will go away once these tools are fully realized.

That goes beyond the ABAP-versus-Java debate to a much broader debate on the future of development work in an SOA and visual modeling world -- inside and outside of SAP. My advice for developers is to try to get their hands on all the new modeling tools and to check out the new composition environment on SDN and the BPX community in order to get a better feeling for the convergence of IT and business.


What does the future look like for ABAP developers?

The future of ABAP (advanced business application programming) is seemingly on every SAP developer's mind. No area of SAP has been harder hit by technical changes than ABAP development, but ABAP is far from dead.

Developers point to ominous signs:

-->All new SAP programs are written in Java (not true)

-->The NetWeaver CE (composition environment) is an exclusively Java-based environment (true)

-->the NetWeaver Developer Studio is also almost exclusively Java-based (true)

When we take the impact of global outsourcing into account as well, we can safely say that it's been a rockier road for ABAP programmers than for any other SAP skill set.



SAP customers don't want to find themselves with a development team that lacks the skills to implement the latest SAP functionality, and SAP programmers are facing enough challenges without having to worry that their skills won't be needed on project sites.

Nov 14, 2007

New to SAP?

Career switch to SAP involves mix of a lot....

.....a lot everything we contribute to help ourselves and get perfection in our dream niche. Here is the platform we needed!

Jus post..
What do you think about SAP in general?
What ERP actually means to you..?
What you are getting confused of?
What is a module..FICO, BI..?
WHATs, WHICHs, WHEREs, WHOs, WHENs(5 Ws)
..replies are awaiting

Giving a start ..an ERP (stands for Enterprise Resource Planning) is an integrated software solution used to manage a company’s resources
MAN MONEY MANAGEMENT MATERIAL MACHINERY

SUGG: jus make use of yourselves to pronounce SAP as 'S', 'A', 'P'

Best Run-Businesses run SAP..thats true 200%