... and you could provide hooks so that the billing/sales/inventory
systems could all be separate "modules" of some sort,
and you could add/swap out modules as they're needed...
and perhaps have them communicate thru XML/SOAP, so
that they could be on different hosts altogether. :-)
There's a m
ðÒÉ×ÅÔ!
Martin Clifford wrote:
> If completely developing a fully functional and optimized E-commerce site isn't good
>enough,
>I don't know what is. I can understand how it may not necessarily be innovative
>(though it could
>have innovative features), but designing such a site would prove
A couple projects that I have thought of doing at are quite large would be:
1. A network monitor, like Big Brother, but written in php. Completely db driven,
with an easy to use web interfaces for monitoring/adding systems and has uptime
graphs, etc. It can be quite complex if you try to add h
It was a few years ago, waaay back in 96, but if its any kind of
help my final year project was to design a hypertext documentation
system for Java.
All it did was take Java source files, and parse them to produce html
output, where instances were linked to take you to the definition of
that
[snip]
Computer Science student (yes, that's me...) by giving him some ideas on his
final year project very possible involving PHP and SQL...
[/snip]
How about a billing system? Accepts orders, processes invoicing, tracks
customer trends and habits, has a method for tracking "aged" bills (over 30
If completely developing a fully functional and optimized E-commerce site isn't good
enough, I don't know what is. I can understand how it may not necessarily be
innovative (though it could have innovative features), but designing such a site would
prove to anyone I know that you have a great
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