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Current Trends in Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) Faith Lamprey Aurora Technologies (401) 765-3721 NEMUG.

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Presentation on theme: "Current Trends in Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) Faith Lamprey Aurora Technologies (401) 765-3721 NEMUG."— Presentation transcript:

1 Current Trends in Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) Faith Lamprey Aurora Technologies (401) 765-3721 aurora@auroratechedi.com www.auroratechedi.com NEMUG November, 2008

2 Agenda EDI Terminology Item Synchronization RFID AS3/AS4 EDI vs XML New X12 Envelope Future of EDI

3 Terminology GS1, the global organization that manages standards and guidelines for several industries, including retail and grocery, publishes GS1 General Specifications Glossary of Terms can be downloaded with (www.gs1.org/docs/barcode/GS1_Standards_Glossary_of_Terms.pdf)

4 UPC UPC - Universal Product Code Bar Code Symbology NOT the same as an Item Number

5 GTIN GTIN – Global Trade Identification Number  Any item (product or service) upon which there is a need to retrieve pre-defined information and that may be priced, or ordered, or invoiced at any point in any supply chain  One type of GTIN is GTIN-12 (made up of twelve digits), assigned by brand owners in the U.S. for trade items that are an each, inner pack, standard case or even unit load (more on “unit load” later)  Each unit of measure needs a separate GTIN

6 Item Reference method of uniqueness for fixed content products Standard trade item grouping of 8 cases 00 614141 44444 C Standard trade item Grouping of 4 cases 00 614141 33333 C The structure is a UCC-12 in the 14 digit GTIN Representation Zeroes are needed if ITF-14 or UCC/EAN-128 bar codes are used Standard trade item grouping of 1 case of 15 retail items 00 614141 22222 C Retail Consumer Trade Item = quantity of one 614141 11111 C

7 SSCC SSCC - Serial Shipping Container Code  Serial Number given to a logistics unit for shipping and receiving  It is tied to an advanced ship notice (ASN) so we know the contents, ordering, and shipping information related to that carton or unit load (00) 0 0614141 123456789 0

8 EPC EPC is the acronym for Electronic Product Code The structure of the data on a tag

9 EPC Format Header EPC Manager Number Object ClassSerial Number Header - identifies the length, type, structure, version, and generation of the EPC EPC Manager Number - entity responsible for maintaining the subsequent partitions (company prefix) Object Class - identifies a class of objects (item reference number) Serial Number - identifies the instance

10 Item Synchronization Originally UCCnet Now managed by GS1 Wal-Mart launched an initiative this past spring called the New Item Creation through Data Synchronization where they asked all of their suppliers to be on Global Data Synchronization by June 1 Both 1SYNC and GSDN were acceptable data pools and data could be submitted via spreadsheet, EDI 832 document or XML formats Ensures data elements are in synch between Trading Partners

11 RF RF is Radio Frequency Radio Frequency is a method of wireless communication  Your garage door is RF  EZ Pass is RF  Wireless LAN RF is a method of data capture  Many scanners are wireless (RF)  You are not tethered to a computing device

12 RF Uses an RF tag that contains the new EPC (Electronic Product Code) Tags:  Chip and antenna inside a traditional label  Built into a plastic or rubber RF tag  Chips built into packaging

13 RFID Tags Active  A tag that has its own power source (battery)  It “chirps” or sends out a signal that says “Here I am” Passive  Must pass through electromagnetic field that sends power to the chip

14 RFID Components Reader Antenna Tag ( chip+antenna)

15 RF Chips Static – serial numbers pre-written Write Once – Read Many (WORM) Write and add information Write and over-write Types  Smart Cards  Smart Chips  Rubber tags in a cow’s ear  Tags built into containers, packaging, pallets

16 RFID Tags

17

18 RFID Issues Reading problems  Depth of field – read too many or not enough  Liquid absorbs RF signals  Other RF devices may interfere Wireless Scanners Wireless networks  Current reads are 85%-90% Cost of labels still too high for widespread adoption Privacy issues

19 RFID Advantages Can read through the box – labels are not smudged Can read the cartons in the middle of the pallet Can be automated and not dependent on people scanning the right label (Label format and placement not an issue) Things talking to things – fork lifts, shelves, dock doors, trucks, garbage containers, products Food / Drug Tracing Automatic check out Call out stale / discontinued product “Find” product in wrong locations

20 AS3 AS3 stands for Applicability Statement 3 It is a communications standard that uses FTP/S to send EDI transactions over the Internet Some say it offers greater security than the HTTP/S-based AS2 protocol It’s a “push and pull” technology, as opposed to AS2, which is a push-only technology EDI or XML transactions can be sent over the Internet using AS3 There are not many large companies mandating use of AS3, as Wal-Mart did with AS2. AS3 has added benefits for those companies that already rely heavily on FTP to send and receive transactions

21 AS4 AS4: Secure B2B Document Exchange Using Web Services Web Services based protocol AS4 standard is being developed by a subcommittee of the OASIS ebXML Messaging Services Technical Committee An open standard for the secure and payload-agnostic exchange of B2B documents using Web services AS4 will not replace AS2 The end goal is to replicate and strategically extend the existing functional requirements currently satisfied by AS2 by mapping those requirements onto the Web services platform

22 EDI vs XML  EDI has defined auditability, tracing, speed Companies do not wish to change what works EDI is well established with defined standards  XML has ease-of-use, easy viewing capability, more tools in the market Companies do not wish to implement “old technologies” XML standards are still in the development stage

23 EDI vs XML

24 New X12 Envelope ANSI X12 is the most commonly used B2B standard Increasing use of EDI globally requires continued development Innovation by businesses continue to drive EDI document development and enhancements

25 New X12 Envelope Changes to the X12 Envelope Standards have been proposed to support:  Multiple destinations (i.e., carbon copy functionality)  Multi-hop capability  Wider (more digits/characters) in send/receive fields  Release and additional delimiters  Internationalization - Multi-byte character sets  Real time transactions with a session number  Publish and subscribe mode HL7 / Public Bid & Response  Harmonization with other Standard Organizations and national efforts  Have a separate field for versioning the code lists – so that the code lists are not dependent on the standard/implementation version numbers.

26 Future of EDI EDI is experiencing an increase in usage as more companies use it to exchange business documents 85-90% of all B2B transaction volumes are based on EDI (2007 study by Forrester Research, B2B Integration Trends: Message Formats) XML is growing quickly but remain, at best, 15% of B2B traffic.

27 Why has EDI not been replaced with another Technology? EDI is a mature standard (is reliable and has wide-spread use) EDI is working – Don’t fix what isn’t broken! EDI is less expensive than implementing newer technologies EDI is ubiquitous – it is everywhere!  HIPAA mandates the use of EDI for secure exchange of medical information (they just changed the law to update to a higher version of the standard!)

28 Why has EDI not been replaced with another Technology? EDI is not industry specific EDI is network protocol independent, allowing it to work with newer protocol standards like AS2 While new technologies and techniques like XML will surely increase in usage, EDI is here to stay!

29 The End www.auroratechedi.com


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