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Programming
Background: Safeway's stores are a fortune 50 food supplier. It not only
owns Safeway brand stores, it has acquired many other store brands in the
past 20 years.
Requirement: An application that could fairly compare wages, labor, time
and costs between all of the Safeways stores, from the smallest 5 employee
shop in a tiny village in the mountains of Montana to the largest 5,000
employee union department store in downtown Los Angeles. The program had to
be flexible. It had to take into account, the differences in cost of
living, the differences in efficiencies of a small store to a large store,
the differences in delivery volume and scheduling, the differences in the
required skill sets between the stores and locations -- and yet, still be
able to compare one with the other and grade each fairly and according to an
established standard. It had to be resistant to manipulation, yet flexible
enough to allow for natural variations.
Solution: The solution was complicated. It required extensive planning and design. It incorporated many more variables than laid out in the relatively
simple requirements document. Several Safeway engineers had come up with
some basic calculations and procedures that was being used to roughly gauge
how a few of the local stores were doing but it didn't have the capabilities
nor the flexibility to fairly evaluate any real range of stores or
locations. In the end, it was a combination of these calculations and
procedures with some extensive programming which included a custom built
formula engine. This allowed the flexibility needed to address the nearly
constant variations going on at all the stores such as inventory, training,
ageing, maintenance, buying spurts etc.
Small & Medium Office - 4 to 80 computers - On call IT Department
Background: Arizona ASAP is a small company located in Scottsdale, AZ. They
have between 6 and 10 employees at any one time. As with most modern
businesses, some portions of their work are extremely computer intensive.
Not only computer intensive but internet intensive as well, and in a
location where bandwidth is not a plentiful thing. They also needed to be
able to share some rather large files and they needed to run a very large
and complicated application in a way that they could all see each other's
work.
Requirement: A fast method of sharing large files. An easy way to share a
FAX machine, a scanner, a 3 color printer and 3 laser printers. A way to run
the same application with the same data at the same time. A way to operate
any computer in the office but retain security against outsiders. A method
of reliably getting on the internet that was not dependant upon many other
pieces of equipment working perfectly. A method of installing and
configuring new equipment, and maintaining older equipment easily and
quickly. A way to easily and reliably protect every computer in the office
against viruses, trojans, adware and spyware. A method of backing up all
the vital data every day and a good disaster recovery plan. All this in a
format that did not require an in-house I.T. department or a high-priced
computer guru sitting there 8 hours a day.
Solution: The solution consisted of a few interlocking pieces as it
frequently does in the computer world. A dedicated server solved the file
and printer sharing requirements while increasing security against
outsiders. This also allowed designated persons to operate designated
computers anywhere in the office as desired. It also allowed a single,
central location for security settings. Network versions of the firewall,
virus protection, the anti-adware, the anti-trojanware and the anti-spyware
software filled the need for reliable, whole-office protection against
hackers and internet threats. The office server also served as a central,
network location to run the required programs and applications. This
solution requires a goodly amount of computer and network expertise that
most offices do not have on-staff. Nor can most small offices afford to
hire an expert to sit around and wait for trouble or the scheduled
anti-virus update. C&R has the expertise and ASAP employs this expertise
for only 8 hours a week and only pays for 8 hours a week. The expert takes
care of installing and configuring new printers and scanners, he buys and
installs new computers as well as upgrading and maintaining the older
machines, he updates the computers' operating systems and all the software
on a weekly basis, he makes sure the backups are performing properly and on
schedule. He has a disaster recovery plan and he returns your call in
minutes. 98% of all problems can be handled over the phone and by remote
control if necessary, but you do have to have the knowledge and training to
know the problem, or find out. C&R has that expertise, knowledge and
training.
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