I caled him, I emailed him, but here is the problems:
#1 He replied to my email, and it bounced due to some Internet issue. I think he said authorization issues. Not sure if it is his end or my work's end, or somewhere inbetween someone locked down their SMTP server (maybe his ISP?) to prevent spamming or filtering out from a certain network, etc. Somehow his domain and my work domain and the hops inbetween cannot talk to each other. I figured that I gave him my work number in email, if he could not email me back he would call.
#2 I am so new at the company that I don't even have a phone yet. In fact, after I got unemployed I turned off my cell phone. So he could call the office, and somebody is going to have to take a message and then find the time to give it to me later.
He calls, leaves a message, leaves his phone number with a coworker. Today she gives it to me, but not a date and time when he called. Ok, maybe I was talking to the boss about Viewtouch when he called? The Boss is only interested in looking at parts of it, looks at the web page, is asking me to cut through the BS. What does this guy mean he has the only system that works like that? We does the same thing with hospital trays that he does with plates, etc. I had to tell him about how he didn't know about our system, and we didn't know about his system until now. Then he saw the PDF, Postscript, etc web reports, and he wants to move the Crystal Reports to the web. He asked me, the ASP expert, if Crystal Reports would load in a Unix environment. I answered that there are at least three ways to view a Crystal Report, an ActiveX control that only works in Windows, a Java viewer that can work on any browser that supports Java, and an HTML viewer for those that don't. So he doesn't want the "Ham and Eggs" or the "Web Reporting" part.
Gene is very kind, offers a demo unit.
Now at this point, my boss is maybe like interested in a few features and has not decided if he wants it or not. So far he said he would rather that we write something than gut some plates hospitality program to add in our Intellectual Property methods. But of course we could license Gene's skeleton, convert VB code into whatever Gene is using, and see what we can get to work. I think this would cut back on development time; however, my boss thinks we can do it by ourselves. Since he doesn't have a price on it, yeah yeah I know, Gene has to look at our system and give an estimate, he isn't all that interested in it but wants to learn more.
BTW, Gene has "hidden" html files on his website which explain more. I guess he doesn't give them out until someone talks to him, and then he says read more about it. Remember that my boss is computer savvy and knows a whole lot more than the average business owner, but he hired us computer nerds to work out the details and prodcut for him. So we cut through the techie/nerd stuff and then give him a summary. He was reading Viewtouch's website, made sense of a few things, some of it he called BS because he looks at competitor's products and they have some of the same features that Gene says is unique to his product. I told him that maybe Gene didn't know about the others, that he didn't know about ours until now. Yes it looked mostly like our product, same pop-up keypad, some type of buttons, etc. Except, it was done in Unix.
Chances are that my boss will say "No" to using Gene's product and if we do go to Unix, it will be something that VB can easily convert into, and something that can make the program look like the VB program.
Our boss's Surgical Tools company goes back 20 years, and uses ideas from that 20 years in our computer product. Gene's company apparently, by the Trademark, goes back 16 years. I assume that neither company knew of each other until now.
Sort of like [link|http://freberg.8m.com/text/columbus.html|Columbus] sailing to North America and finding out that the Native/Tribal Americans have the same exact stuff that his country does, and that they sent a ship over to Europe to see if they could reach the other side of North America. "You found us? We found you on our beach!" Sorry, [link|http://freberg.8m.com/|Stan Freeberg] reference. Ever listen to Stan Freeberg Presents:
"The United States of America"? But I got a feeling that we won't buy his product for a bag of beads, it will mostly cost more than that. We aren't the US Government here, just a small business of computer nerds now talking to another company which may obviously also hire computer nerds. We apparently have some things in common. :)