Sage 300
Sage 300 is the name for the mid market Sage ERP line of enterprise management and accounting applications (formerly Sage ACCPAC), primarily serving small and medium-sized businesses. Since 2004, Sage 300 is developed by Sage. In 2012, Sage renamed ACCPAC to Sage 300.
Developer(s) | Sage Group |
---|---|
Stable release | Sage 300 2020
/ 13 August 2019 [1] |
Operating system | Microsoft Windows |
Available in | English, French (Canadian), Spanish, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional)[2] |
Type | ERP |
Website | www |
Features
Sage 300 is a Windows based range of ERP software, running on Microsoft SQL. This can run under a Windows environment[3] and has an option of being hosted by Sage. Sage 300 is a modula system with the follow core suites of modules. The full list of modules developed in the Sage 300 API is also available
Financials suite
- General ledger
- Bank services
- Tax services
- Accounts payable
- Accounts receivable
- Multi-company
Operations suite
- Inventory control[4]
- Purchase orders
- (Sales) order entry
Payroll
- US and Canadian payroll[5]
Core options
- Multi-currency
- Project and job costing
- Transaction analysis and optional fields
It is multi-user, multi-currency, and multi-language. It is available in six languages: English, Spanish, French, Italian and Chinese (Simplified and Traditional).
History
The original product, EasyBusiness Systems, was developed for the CP/M operating system[6] in 1976 by the Basic Software Group[7] and distributed by Information Unlimited Software. This was ported to MS-DOS and the IBM-PC in 1983.[7][8]
Computer Associates acquired Information Unlimited Software in 1983[9][10][11] and ran it as an independent business unit.[12][13] Easy Business Systems added payroll processing in 1984 and supported multiuser networking at this time.[14] In 1987, it implemented a multi-window interface to allow moving between different modules.[12] Easy Business Systems was renamed Accpac Plus in 1987 with the release of version 5.[15] Accpac became popular in Canada with support of Canadian public accounting firms that would sell and support the software.[13] The name Accpac is an acronym for 'A Complete and Comprehensive Program for Accounting Control'.[16]
The first Windows version, CA-accpac/2000, popularly known as ACCPAC for Windows, was developed in the early 1990s and released in October 1994.[17][18] The Windows version marked the move to client/server and was developed with all new code developed in COBOL with Computer Associates development tools (these components were redeveloped in 2001 in Accpac Advantage Series with a core business layer developed in C and a user interface layer developed in Visual Basic).[19][20]
In October 1996 ACCPAC for Windows 2.0 was released.[21] In August 2001, the company presented ACCPAC Advantage Series 5.0, its first web-based version.[22]
Sage 300 initially ran on Btrieve Databases[23] and then supported a variety of database backends.[24] Since Sage 300 2016 only the MS SQL database is supported.[23]
Sage Software acquired Accpac from Computer Associates in 2004.[25] Sage named it Sage Accpac ERP in 2006,[26] then Sage ERP Accpac in 2009. Sage dropped the Accpac name in 2012 when it was renamed to Sage 300 ERP.[27]
Branding, editions and versions
Branding | Edition | Internal Version | Owner | Year | Databases |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sage 300 2020 | Standard/Advanced/Premium | 6.7 | Sage Group | 2019 | MS SQL[28] |
Sage 300 2019 | Standard/Advanced/Premium | 6.6 | Sage Group | 2018 | MS SQL[29] |
Sage 300 2018 | Standard/Advanced/Premium | 6.5 | Sage Group | 2017 | MS SQL[30] |
Sage 300 2017 | Standard/Advanced/Premium | 6.4 | Sage Group | 2016 | MS SQL[31] |
Sage 300 2016 | Standard/Advanced/Premium | 6.3 | Sage Group | 2015 | MS SQL[32] |
Sage 300 2014 | Standard/Advanced/Premium | 6.2[33] | Sage Group | 2013 | Pervasive PSQL, MS SQL, Oracle [34] |
Sage 300 ERP 2012 | Standard/Advanced/Premium | 6.1[33] | Sage Group | 2012 | Pervasive PSQL, MS SQL, Oracle [35] |
Sage ERP Accpac 6.0 | 100/200/500 | 6.0[33] | Sage Group | 2010 | Pervasive PSQL, MS SQL, Oracle [36] |
Sage Accpac ERP 5.6 | 100/200/500 | 5.6[33] | Sage Group | 2009 | Pervasive.SQL, MS SQL, Oracle [37] |
Sage Accpac ERP 5.5 | 100/200/500 | 5.5[33] | Sage Group | 2008 | Pervasive.SQL, MS SQL, IBM DB2, Oracle [38] |
Sage Accpac ERP 5.4 | 100/200/500 | 5.4 | Sage Group | 2006 | Pervasive.SQL, MS SQL, IBM DB2, Oracle [39] |
Sage Accpac ERP 5.3 | 100/200/500 | 5.3[40] | Sage Group | 2004 | Pervasive.SQL, MS SQL, IBM DB2, Oracle [41] |
Accpac Advantage Series 5.3 | Small Business/Corporate/Enterprise | 5.3[40] | Accpac International | 2004[42] | |
Accpac Advantage Series 5.2 | Small Business/Corporate/Enterprise | 5.2[43] | Accpac International | 2003[44] | |
Accpac Advantage Series 5.1 | Small Business/Corporate/Enterprise | 5.1[45] | Accpac International | ||
Accpac Advantage Series 5.0 | Small Business/Corporate/Enterprise | 5.0[46] | Accpac International | 2001 | |
Accpac Corporate Series 4.2 | Discovery/Small Business/Corporate/Director/Executive | 4.2[47] | Accpac International | 2000 | Pervasive.SQL, MS SQL[48] |
Accpac Corporate Series 4.1 | Discovery/Small Business/Corporate/Director/Executive | 4.1[49] | Accpac International | 1999 | Pervasive.SQL, MS SQL [50] |
Accpac Corporate Series 4.0 | Discovery/Small Business/Corporate/Director/Executive | 4.0[51] | Accpac International | ||
Accpac for Windows 3.0 | Discovery/Small Business/Corporate/Director/Executive | 3.0[52] | Accpac International | ||
Accpac for Windows 2.0 | Plus | 2.0 | Accpac International | 1996[21] | Btrieve (16 and 32 Bit)[53] |
CA-Accpac/2000 | 1.0 | Computer associates | 1994[17] | Btrieve 6.15 [54] |
See also
- Comparison of accounting software
- Sage Software
References
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- Smith, Stephen (2015-09-26). "International Support in Sage 300c". Retrieved 2018-12-18.
- Accounting Software 411 - Sage Accpac ERP Software Profile
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- Spiegelman, Lisa (July 1986). "Easy Business Systems to get enhancements". InfoWorld. 8 (28): 18.
- "Computer Associates International, Inc. History". 2003. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
- Baker, William (November 2008). "William T. Baker - Curriculum Vitae". Ocean Group. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
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- Salmon, Alan. "The New ACCPAC". K2 Enterprise Canada. Archived from the original on 10 April 2009. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
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- "The 100 top-rated products of 1987". InfoWorld. 9 (52): 25. December 1987.
- Vlietstra, J. (2001-02-23). Dictionary of Acronyms and Technical Abbreviations: For Information and Communication Technologies and Related Areas. ISBN 9781852333973.
- Hoffman, Thomas (October 24, 1994). "CA takes desktop accounting multiplatform". Computerworld. 28 (43): 10. Retrieved March 29, 2019 – via Google Books.
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- Smith, Stephen (September 11, 2010). "Accpac's Business Logic". Stephen Smith's Blog. Retrieved March 29, 2019.
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- "ACCPAC International, a Division of Computer Associates International, Announces Bundling Agreement With Pervasive Software; 10-User Version of Btrieve Client/Server Engine Now Available With ACCPAC for Windows System Manager 2.0". Business Wire. October 28, 1996. Retrieved March 29, 2019 – via TheFreeDictionary.com.
- "ACCPAC premieres pure Web solution for mid-market business management". itweb.co.za. August 28, 2001. Retrieved March 29, 2019.
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