SLX
Tech
Land Forms
& Water Bodies
Support
Processes
SalesLogix
History
Infor
Acronyms
CRM SLX
Cloud
PC
History
200

This SQL database User is the owner of the Infor CRM SLX database schema

SYSDBA

200

This largest ocean on the planet

Pacific

200

The length of time a support incident be closed and still be re-opened

90 days

200

This entrepreneur created SalesLogix in 1995

Pat Sullivan

200

Infor Operating _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Service

200

For Infor CRM Cloud (ST), how many servers are a part of a small architecture deployment?

1

200

This the best selling single computer model of all time, selling over 30 million between 1982 and 1993

Commodore 64


400

The User the CRM SLX Implementation Guide recommends to be used for the SlxClient application pool

WebDLL

400

The Earth's largest island

Greenland

400

The Infor Team that manages customers that do not have a current support plan, or their support plan has expired

Customer Care 

aka Entitlement Check process

400

The company that purchased SalesLogix from Interact Commerce / aka Best Software

Sage

400

BOE

Back Office Extension

400

Dale Murphy is the current primary Subject Matter expert on CRM SLX Cloud. 

_ _ _ _ _ _ Tuquero is the backup/secondary CRM SLX Cloud Subject Matter Expert.

Darwin

400

This was processor in the first IBM PC Model 5150

8088

600

This Entity is the top of the CRM SLX Database database hierarchy

Account

600

This is the world's longest river

The Amazon @ 4,335 miles

The Nile is 4,132 miles

600

True / False

Partners (and Customers) can receive code level Developer / Customization support for Infor CRM SLX by submitting an incident in the Support Portal 


True! 

Scott Viverito has been delivering CRM Developer support for over 17 years!

Note: Officially, Scott can help troubleshoot errors in existing code, but not create new code for customizations.

600

This gentleman was CEO of Infor prior to Kevin Samuelson

Charles Phillips

Charles kicked off the acquisition of SalesLogix in this same hotel in 2016...

600

CSM

Customer Success Manager

600

This is the process Infor partners use to gain RDP access to a customer Cloud Environment

Send an email to Alerts-InforCRM-CloudOps@infor.com 

with the following information:

1) Written Customer approval
2) Time frame (with a maximum of 48 hours)
3) Reason for access
4) Public IP(s) for whitelisting

600

The year the first IBM PC was released

1981

800

True or False

Account associations cannot be set up in the CRM SLX Web Client

False

They can be set up in the Web Client

Permanent Account associations can be set up in Application Architect

800

The Earth's smallest ocean

The Arctic

It is 1.5 times the size of the United States

800

When non-technical challenges occur with the Support Portal, Partners and Customers should call this phone # for assistance

877-772-4111

800

The year Infor acquired SalesLogix

2016

800

ION

Intelligent Open Network

800

Infor CRM SLX is hosted in this AWS region

US East

800

IBM sold off it's PC line in 2005 to this company

Lenovo

1000

This default SpeedSearch Index runs out of the box, but is not intended to be searched by an end user

Potential match index, PMI

1000

These are the names of the 5 Great Lakes

Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario

1000

This is the time frame Infor Support is expected to make initial contact on a Severity 1 incident

Less than 30 minutes

1000

The year SalesLogix was first released

1995

1000

AMI

Amazon Machine Image

1000

Infor CRM SLX Cloud Customers automatically receive this many free Staging Days

12

They can purchase more as needed

1000

This company sold the first computer mouse in 1982

Xerox sold the first mouse, but...

Douglas Engelbart invented it 52 years ago. He introduced his "X–Y Position Indicator for a Display System"—more commonly known today as the computer mouse—during a 90-minute presentation on a "computer-based, interactive, multi-console display system" at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) in Menlo Park, California. This event—attended by some 1,000 computer professionals—would later be called by many the "mother of all demos". - Scientific America, August 2009
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