Yeh WorldShip usually works, but you would think, considering that WorldShip uses SQL Server as it's database, that SQL Server is an awfully slow product. Nah, it's just UPS's implementation of it and the WorldShip program itself. WorldShip is serious bloatware. It should perhaps be a compact little program that runs its "clients" in a web browser and only requires updating on the "server" machine. Instead, updates take a long time, AND every workstation needs to run them. If they aren't doing this already, UPS should have a 2nd team developing a small, tightly-coded program to replace the WorldShip monstrosity. Would someone kindly tell UPS management that this is the 21st century?
I completely agree. If they had to write this software for the iPhone or Android (to name two) it would be a couple of MB in size. There is no excuse for the bloat in WorldShip for Windows, except for maybe some IT guys justifying their huge salaries.
Jeandro's comments are completely accurate, only I was able, after months of development, to get WS 11 stable. Right away they forced us to go to version 12. Versions higher than 12 are unusable do to slowness, instability and corruption, and inability to stay on an export map after it is chosen. Also we went through hell to get our negotiated rates into the system, and then they were lost after the version 12 update. We are being told that since we went to version 12 and then converted back, that our rates cannot be restored.
Bottom line: If UPS has so much money to waste that they can afford to program and support a useless behemouth like Worldship, then we are paying too much for shipping.
For the record , Worldship 2011 (v11) is the last version that the odbc mapping remained stable. No versions after that were usable and v11 is barely usable.
Wordlship 11 is a bloated mess. UPS now uses software called Crossware to attempt to make up for the disorganized and overly complicated methods that they employed while authoring Worldship. The field naming conventions, table structure and field data types make it impossible to connect to any other software. When attempting to connect to an ODBC database Worldship is soooo slow! Adding Crossware slows it down even more. The Crossware corrupted once a week at our location and you are then at the mercy of UPS Tech support. I found that filling out a help desk ticket gave you a one in five chance of someone calling you back the same day, and in one case not at all. They keep paying these programmers to write this rubbish, I cannot believe it.
Bottom line: If UPS has so much money to waste that they can afford to program and support a useless behemouth like Worldship, then we are paying too much for shipping.
For the record , Worldship 2011 (v11) is the last version that the odbc mapping remained stable. No versions after that were usable and v11 is barely usable.