111 projects tagged "Point-Of-Sale"
Quick Order is a realtime ordering system using Java Wireless HTTP Form. It uses J2ME libraries to submit forms to an HTTP server running PHP and MySQL. It can run on any embedded device that supports Java Wireless, including mobile phones and Palm systems. It is ideal for making orders in restaurants, point of sale (POS), etc. It supports English and Chinese Big 5 encoding.
The Cybercafe Organizer (CybOrg) is a point of sales and administration system for Internet cafes (cyber cafes). It has a Web-based interface and is written in Perl using Template Toolkit and a RDBMS. It uses a client to block workstations, and is intended to be used on a (possibly Linux) server with Win32/Linux clients.It also provides a script to be used as the Active Desktop on Windows clients to display station's status.
Cream is a multilingual customer relationship management (CRM) system for media organizations. The application tracks sales orders, payments, shipments, services, online and print subscriptions, and the effectiveness of promotional campaigns through its easy-to-use reporting and analytical functions. Cream features a powerful module for communication with customers, including incoming and outgoing email, template-based HTML newsletters, and a WYSIWYG editor.
My Handy Restaurant is software created to help restaurant waiters and managers in their job. Waiters can choose a restaurant table, assign orders to it and have them automatically printed on printers. "Normal" dishes can also be modified, by adding or removing ingredients. Bills can be printed automatically, even for separated bills. The accounting section allows a restaurant manager to easily administrate the whole accounting (bank accounts, employees, suppliers, income) in an easy way. Stock management is also available, and items quantity is automatically updated. The interface is handheld-sized and is written to be compatible with most handheld browsers.
The Java Fiscal Device API is a medium-level API to communicate with fiscal devices such as fiscal printers. It handles the communication protocol, the formatting and parsing of the protocol packets, and provides event-based notification for certain events such as out-of-paper events. It was made for Hasar printers (in use in Argentina and other countries) but also works fine with Epson printers.