What is Oracle Calendar?
Oracle Calendar is designed to be your diary and calendar, which will assist you in managing your appointments and work time more effectively.
You can enter information so that only you have access to it, or you can restrict access to a specified individual or group of users.
What can it be used for?
Oracle Calendar can be used to plan your schedule and save time:
Arrange meetings with other Oracle Calendar users.
Examine the schedules of other members of University staff.
Make to-do lists, reminder notes and keep a record of things you have done.
Print schedules in a variety of formats.
How and where do I install it?
There are a number of ways to view your Oracle Calendar schedule:
Desktop Client - Installation guide | How to use
Web Client - Log in | Publish your agenda to the world
Most Smart Phones - Mobile phone installation guide
Palm Pilot - Palm Pilot installation guide
PocketPC - PocketPC installation guide
Copied from: http://www.bath.ac.uk/bucs/tools/calendar/
For more info: http://www.oracle.com/us/industries/communications/communications-calendar-server-066178.html or Oracle Common Application Calendar User Guide
Monday, April 9, 2012
Multiple Nodes
E-Business Suite can be located on more than one server (node) to improve the performance. Depending on the logging users' s transactions
load of the server increases and performance decreases. To maintain high performance multiple nodes can be used, users can still use single
login link and users are automatically directed to the less loaded server when they click the link.
Though this system too has some disadvantages; application files like forms, oaf pages need to be installed on all servers depending on the need.
That means extra work for every deployment. Standard Oracle EBS functionality keeps attachments on the database as binary files to prevent discrepancies between servers.
load of the server increases and performance decreases. To maintain high performance multiple nodes can be used, users can still use single
login link and users are automatically directed to the less loaded server when they click the link.
Though this system too has some disadvantages; application files like forms, oaf pages need to be installed on all servers depending on the need.
That means extra work for every deployment. Standard Oracle EBS functionality keeps attachments on the database as binary files to prevent discrepancies between servers.
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