I don't expect to see this soon and I'll be retired before 2025 so this is just a pie in the sky 'wouldn't-it-nice' idea.
I've used procedural design programs and Visual Basic back in the day and so am a fan of graphical interfaces allowing you to visually create connections. It would be cool if there was a middleware application like MivaPay or a cloud version of Synchro (MivaIntegrator?) that you could connect your QuickBooks or other accounting software to and show a sample Sales Order with all mappable fields. Show your Miva sales order with all mappable fields. Drag an arrow connector to establish a connection between the corresponding field in each program. See a sample using actual data and if all is okay press a button to save this as a configuration file with all the mappings and *poof* you can now synchronize without a lot of wrestling and swearing. :)
I'm sure the visual wizards could be applied to other functions. When visual design wizards work they can save time even for experts on many tasks, and it should allow less technical users to do more and maybe even reduce 'how do I do this' service calls.
I've used procedural design programs and Visual Basic back in the day and so am a fan of graphical interfaces allowing you to visually create connections. It would be cool if there was a middleware application like MivaPay or a cloud version of Synchro (MivaIntegrator?) that you could connect your QuickBooks or other accounting software to and show a sample Sales Order with all mappable fields. Show your Miva sales order with all mappable fields. Drag an arrow connector to establish a connection between the corresponding field in each program. See a sample using actual data and if all is okay press a button to save this as a configuration file with all the mappings and *poof* you can now synchronize without a lot of wrestling and swearing. :)
I'm sure the visual wizards could be applied to other functions. When visual design wizards work they can save time even for experts on many tasks, and it should allow less technical users to do more and maybe even reduce 'how do I do this' service calls.
Comment