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==Description==
==Description==
[[Image:JBA.gif|right]]
British software developer that traded as '''JBA Software Products Ltd.''' in its home country and as '''JBA International''' in the USA but was originally founded in 1985 as Harncroft Ltd. and took over AS/400 software specialist Bluebird Software Ltd. in 1992. JBA initially specialised in developing software for [[IBM]]'s [[AS/400]] platform (now known as System i) but later moved more towards software for the manufacturing industry.
British software developer that traded as '''JBA Software Products Ltd.''' in its home country and as '''JBA International''' in the USA but was originally founded in 1985 as Harncroft Ltd. and took over AS/400 software specialist Bluebird Software Ltd. in 1992. JBA initially specialised in developing software for [[IBM]]'s [[AS/400]] platform (now known as System i) but later moved more towards software for the manufacturing industry.



Revision as of 00:10, 31 December 2014

Description

British software developer that traded as JBA Software Products Ltd. in its home country and as JBA International in the USA but was originally founded in 1985 as Harncroft Ltd. and took over AS/400 software specialist Bluebird Software Ltd. in 1992. JBA initially specialised in developing software for IBM's AS/400 platform (now known as System i) but later moved more towards software for the manufacturing industry.

Best known for the "Business 400" application for AS/400, a modular (or "package" systems in AS/400 terminology) business system that had supported general modules such accounting, warehousing/logistics, marketing, production and so on in addition to more specialised products such as modules developed specifically for the fashion and drinks industries, this system was later renamed "System 21". In company did deliver a small number of OS/2 and Windows hosted tools in the early to mid 90's, the tools that targeted cross-development for the AS/400 system sold reasonably well but the tools that were primarily generic OS/2 development tools were badly marketed and most OS/2 programmers never became aware of them, to a point that some of them complained when news of JBA products appeared on USENET or on OS/2 news sites.

JBA Holdings was taken over by Geac Computer Corporation in 1999, but the chaotic financial environment at GCC meant that the bulk of the JBA staff was let go later that year, a number of them going on to form AROQ.

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