| DYNAMICS NAV GOES BACK INTO THE R&D OVEN |
| Friday, 05 March 2010 01:33 |
| There's no official information that says that Dynamics NAV 7 is delayed. But if you take up the previous time frame of 2010-2011, and add the fact that all Microsoft will says is that release "is scheduled for release in calendar year 2011-2012", it looks like there's some sort of delay. There's no hint at which end of the rather loose schedules, either the original or the new one, in which the product will hit the market. This broke via a Twitter post from Rob Helm an analyst with Directions on Microsoft who follows Microsoft developments and that post had no information other than there would be a delay. |
Bob Scott has been informing and entertaining the mid-market financial software community with his email newsletters for 10 years. And he has been covering this market through print publications for 18 years, first as technology editor of Accounting Today and then as the Editor of Accounting Technology from 1997 through 2009. He has covered the traditional tax and accounting profession during the same time and continues to address that as executive editor of the Progressive Accountant.
About the Author: Gene Marks, a columnist, author, and business owner, writes monthly online management and technology columns for Forbes and Business Week and a bi-weekly column that appears nationally in American City Business Journals. His books include Gene's books include the #1 Amazon Small Business Best Seller The Streetwise Small Business Book of Lists (Adams Media), The Small Business Desk Reference (Alpha Books, 2004), Outfoxing The Small Business Owner - Crafty Techniques for Creating a Profitable Relationship (Adams Media, 2005) and The Complete Idiot's Guide To Successful Outsourcing (Alpha Books, 2005). He owns and operates the Marks Group PC, a ten-person firm that provides technology and consulting services to small and medium-sized businesses. Before starting the Marks Group, Marks spent nine years in the entrepreneurial services arm of the international consulting firm KPMG in Philadelphia where he was a senior manager. |