![]() What’s more, when moving to Release 9.2 we encourage customers to reduce customisations. We recommend customers take advantage of these benefits. In recent history, Oracle and JD Edwards have invested substantially in simplifying release management, upgrade process and system maintenance. In line with the annual combined updates known as UN 3,4,5 etc we expect there will be a major release once a year. Now Oracle has implemented the next steps: JD Edwards removed the 9.2 release number and only kept the release number: 22. After 3 years of 9.2 it became clear there wouldn’t be a release 9.3 : 9.2 was to be the last release securing this number and updates were released. ![]() JD Edwards followed that sequence when it announced 9.2. With the arrival of SaaS solutions several releases per year started to be the new normal. ![]() Release 9.1 was announced in 2012 followed by 9.2 in 2015.Īt that time ERP systems were heavily customised, and customers upgraded every 3 to 5 years if not longer. From that moment on, we progressed gradually to 8.11 in 2005, to 8.12 in 2006 and Oracle stepped into the 9’s in 2009. JD Edwards Enterprise One started with XE. To explain the numbers let’s re trace our journey and take a step back in time. What happened to Release 9.2?Ģ2 is a big leap from 9.2, did we miss 10 to 21 including all the sub releases? Did COV-ID 19 really last that long? Fortunately, it is now a lot simpler. The first thing that caught our eye with the announcement was the number 22…. JD Edwards Release 22 was announced last week.
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