From my experience I at the moment would like to warn anybody from using web version of EPPM.
I can imagine, that Oracle had to effectively rewrite a huge chunk of historical code first in Java and now in Java-script to move desktop version to WEB.
Whilst I admire the efforts they have taken, at the moment it just does not work well. Not to mention the natural limitation of not being able to manage thouthand of activities in Web interface, even with small amount of activities the software has a lot of bugs, some of them are difficult to hunt down, because they do not manifest 100% of time.
I do not know, when web-based version will be comparable with the desktop one in functionality and stability, if ever.
If you think of it, for a monster like Google it took more than 10 years of intensive development to bring Google Sheets to be comparable in functionality with desktop Excel (plus all collaboration features, which are great), but Google Docs for instance still lags behind MS Word, so my guess it will take Oracle a lot of time, before desktop version can be practically used.
I did smile at your concept of a large project having hundreds of tasks. I would say more than ten thousand is large. The web based EPPM interface is unused in my client base, as a browser is no place to pivot 10,000 rows. The windows client works perfectly well with the EPPM database. You will continue to need the web interface for administration purposes. The Windows client often needs Citrix installed in order to function with good performance.
I work in the company, where EPPM was implemented by a management decision, so I don't have too much choice. And for our not big projects it works well (there are challenges in integration of P6 with Oracle ERP, but this is another story)
But my question is: what is peoples experience in using EPPM for large projects?
What is the practical project size limit somebody reached?
In general, what are the areas, where EPPM is used?
I am reaching on this forum, because here I shall get a more real picture, then from Oracle marketing web site.
Member for
20 years 6 months
Member for20 years7 months
Submitted by Santosh Bhat on Sun, 2019-03-17 12:36
Member for
9 years 7 monthsFrom my experience I at the
From my experience I at the moment would like to warn anybody from using web version of EPPM.
I can imagine, that Oracle had to effectively rewrite a huge chunk of historical code first in Java and now in Java-script to move desktop version to WEB.
Whilst I admire the efforts they have taken, at the moment it just does not work well. Not to mention the natural limitation of not being able to manage thouthand of activities in Web interface, even with small amount of activities the software has a lot of bugs, some of them are difficult to hunt down, because they do not manifest 100% of time.
I do not know, when web-based version will be comparable with the desktop one in functionality and stability, if ever.
If you think of it, for a monster like Google it took more than 10 years of intensive development to bring Google Sheets to be comparable in functionality with desktop Excel (plus all collaboration features, which are great), but Google Docs for instance still lags behind MS Word, so my guess it will take Oracle a lot of time, before desktop version can be practically used.
Member for
21 yearsChary, I did smile at your
Chary,
I did smile at your concept of a large project having hundreds of tasks. I would say more than ten thousand is large. The web based EPPM interface is unused in my client base, as a browser is no place to pivot 10,000 rows. The windows client works perfectly well with the EPPM database. You will continue to need the web interface for administration purposes. The Windows client often needs Citrix installed in order to function with good performance.
Member for
9 years 7 monthsTo continue on this topic.Is
To continue on this topic.
Member for
9 years 7 monthsSantosh, I work in the
Santosh,
Member for
20 years 6 monthsStick to the P6 professional
Stick to the P6 professional client. EPPM web-based is not designed for large scale schedules.