BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov 27, 2024--
Companies who are building Business Central solutions can offer their clients advanced mobile apps by using Resco technology, helping them to reach their productivity goals.
This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241127575721/en/
With Resco-powered mobile apps, clients can perform detailed on-site inspections, track time, optimize job routing, schedule tasks, and access Outlook emails — all while working with Business Central data in the field. All functionality and data are fully available in offline mode as well.
The full customizability of Resco’s mobility solutions allows partners and clients to build:
By installing Resco to your Power Platform, Dataverse or Dynamics environments, clients benefit from native integration between Business Central and these platforms, using Resco Mobile CRM as their front end.
Resco fully supports Dataverse's virtual tables, allowing users to access Business Central data via Resco mobile apps, both online and offline. Additional information about the integration can be found on Resco’s wiki.
The Resco team will be presenting the possibilities of this integration at the EMEA Directions for Partners in Vienna this November.
Potential partners interested in collaborating on innovative Business Central solutions are encouraged to book a meeting with Resco experts or to reach out at sales@resco.net.
ABOUT RESCO
Over the past 25 years, Resco has helped the world work better outside the office by making it simple to build complex mobile experiences for frontline workers.
The company’s low-code tools and solutions enable organizations to build and deploy enterprise-level business apps quickly and easily. These solutions allow mobile workers to access or capture data on the go, using any mobile device, even when offline. Field teams can tackle field service, mobile sales, data collection, or any other frontline scenario while delivering valuable data back to the office.
With full offline functionality, a no-code/low-code development platform, and native integration with Microsoft Dynamics 365, Power Platform, and Salesforce, Resco empowers organizations worldwide to tackle the most demanding mobile challenges faced by frontline workers.
Over 800 enterprise and corporate companies from segments like utilities, retail, energy, oil & gas, manufacturing, telecommunications, transportation & logistics, or NGOs rely on Resco to simplify their frontline operations, improve efficiency, and reduce paperwork.
Resco invites partners to expand Business Central solutions with advanced mobility (Graphic: Business Wire)
MIDDLEBORO, Mass. (AP) — Weeks before Thanksgiving, some of the cranberries on dinner plates Thursday are floating on the Rocky Meadow bog in southeastern Massachusetts.
The cranberries have turned this pond pinkish crimson. Several workers, up to their waist in water, gently corral the berries toward a pump that vacuums them up onto a waiting truck. There, the berries are run through a system that separates them from leaves and vines and are transported to processing plant, which eventually turns them into sauce, juice or sweet and dried berries.
The native wetland plants that produce cranberries start growing in May. When they are ready to be harvested, farmers flood their bogs with water and send out a picking machine to shake the berries from the vines. Then more water is added to the bog, and the freed cranberries float to the surface.
“The season has been pretty good this year. We’ve had a pretty good crop,” said Steve Ward, a second-generation cranberry grower, on the edge of his bog.
The harvest runs from September through early November, and Ward is expected to produce between 15,000 and 20,000 barrels, the best crop he has had in three years. About 80% of those berries will go to Ocean Spray, a massive producer of cranberry products in the U.S.
This bog is one of nearly 300 in Massachusetts that cover some 14,000 acres, and this year farmers are projected to produce 2.2 million barrels of cranberries, with one barrel amounting to 100 pounds (45 kilograms). That's an increase of 12% over last year. Massachusetts is the second-biggest cranberry producing region in the U.S. behind Wisconsin, and the industry there dates back to the 1800s.
Despite the size of the sector, farmers in the state have weathered several challenges over the years, from trade wars to falling prices to a glut of berries. Some have sold off their bogs or moved to diversify by putting solar panels around their bogs. Ward has two solar sites near his bogs and is considering putting floating solar installations on his water holes and reservoirs.
Ward said farmers are also having to adapt to a changing climate — which the Massachusetts Cranberries, a group that advocates on behalf of the industry, said could lead to a lower harvest this year.
“We have had some challenges with some of the hot weather and had one of the longest dry spells we have ever had," he said. “We are having more 90-degree (32 degrees Celsius) days clumped together. The cranberry plants just don't like that type of weather. Our average temperatures, especially at night, are higher. Cranberries need cooler temperatures at night."
Workers adjust floating booms while wet harvesting cranberries at Rocky Meadow Bog, Friday, Nov. 1, 2024, in Middleborough, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Cans of cranberry sauce line a turkey display case at Bongi's Turkey Roost in advance of the Thanksgiving holiday, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2022, in Duxbury, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Cranberries float while being harvested at Rocky Meadow Bog, Friday, Nov. 1, 2024, in Middleborough, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Steve Ward, a second-generation cranberry grower, gestures from the edge of his bog during a harvest at Rocky Meadow Bog, Friday, Nov. 1, 2024, in Middleborough, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Workers adjust floating booms while wet harvesting cranberries at Rocky Meadow Bog, Friday, Nov. 1, 2024, in Middleborough, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Workers adjust floating booms, left, as cranberries are loaded for transport and processing during a wet harvest at Rocky Meadow Bog, Friday, Nov. 1, 2024, in Middleborough, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Workers adjust floating booms while wet harvesting cranberries at Rocky Meadow Bog, Friday, Nov. 1, 2024, in Middleborough, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)