Friday, 8 August 2014

ETR MACHINES VARIETY ETR MACHINE A100,ELTRADE,DP50,MP55,INCOTEX



RE: ETR  QUOTATION

Item
Unit Price -Kshs
Qty
Total cost-kshs
ELECTRONIC TAX REGISTER( MERCURY 130W ) WITH GPRS
23,000
1
23,000
DATECS DP50
28,000
1
28,000
INCOTEX 130F
21,000
1
21,000
ELTRADE A100
26,000
1
26,000
DATECS MP55
38,000
1
38,000








TOTAL COST




NB: All prices are VAT inclusive.All machines come with 1 year warranty.inclusive of Installation and K.R.A  processing.
We hope you include us in your success

Yours Faithfully,              
For:DEJAVU TECHNOLOGIES
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     


5.Fiscal Tax Registersa) PORTABLE CASH REGISTER MERCURY 130w


Portable self-stand cash register Mercury 130W is designed for money accounting with customers in trade (outdoor trade) and service.
It performs operations of bookkeeping and control, prints out receipts, control tape (electronic log) and reports (X-reports, Z-reports, fiscal report by number and dates, report by registrations). The ECR has cashier’s liquid-crystal display, thermal printer, built-in li-ion battery, port RS232 for connection with bar-code scanner, side-mounted keyboard, customer’s display, bed sheet printer. The ECR is adapted to operation with electronic control protected band.
The distinctive features of the ECR:

- paper input “by one movement”
- small overall dimensions and weight
- display backlight
- a small strap for carrying
   
BASIC SPECIFICATION
 
Mercury-180F
Number of cashiers
10
Number of departments
99
Fiscal memory
No less than 2000
Electronic log capacity 
3800 purchases
Receipt tape
Thermal paper, width 57 mm
Printing speed
7 lines/sec
Cliche programming
14 line with 24 characters
Input and indication of sums
8 decimal digits
Nonvolatile memory, clock, calendar
Clock accuracy =2sec/day
Built-in battery
7,4V, 1,8Ah
Power consumption at the battery charging, no more than
10Wt
Average possible number of printed receipts per a shift with completely  charged battery
1500 (or 30 hours of continuous operation)
Dimensions and weight
191x96x61, 390 gr.

                              INCOTEX 130F Description:ЕCR with a fast and noiseless thermo printer, paper tape - 57 mm wide, 32 characters per line,  two 10-digit 7-segment LCD displays, fiscal memory with 2000 daily reports, electronic journal with over 7000 lines, maintains restaurant mode and fiscal printer mode, two RS-232, one RS-232 /RS-485 interfaces for electronic scales, personal computer, bar-code scanner, external printer, built-in rechargeable  battery.
Specifications:
Restaurant mode – yes       
Fiscal printer mode – yes
·         Electronic journal – over 7000 lines
·         PLU (commodities) – from 1140 to 2770 (option – over 13 000)
·         PLU database structuring – yes, with choice of two prices, bar codes and available quantities
·         Departments – 8
·         Operators – 8
·         Commodity groups – 8
·         Measurement units – 10
·         Payments – 5
·         Counters (stands) – 6
·         Customers – 50
·         Fiscal memory – 2000 daily reports
·         Display – two 10-digit, 7-segment LCD
·         Thermo printer – fast and noiseless, TPM-021 type
·         Paper tapes, width – one, 57 mm
·         Characters per line – 32
·         Advertising text – 2 lines
·         Graphical logo – 384 х 144
·         Weight bar codes – yes
·         Available quantities – yes
·         Programmable rate of exchange for foreign currency payment – yes
·         Reports:
o    reports by PLU and PLU groups
o    report by tax groups
o    reports by operators
o    report by sales
o    daily financial report
o    periodic report
o    fiscal memory reports by record numbers and by date.

Cash Register - ELTRADE A100S
·         Fiscalisation (commissioning)
·         RegistratioN with KRA
·         Subscribe to sim card in a year
·         Service contract for a year!

ELTRADE A100S is a mobile cash register with integrated GPRS module and the journal (journal electronically) and with EasyLoad mechanism for fast loading paper. compact and Li-ion battery, printed on a single charge up to 40 000 lines, A100S  is suitable for use in small shops, kiosks, boutiques, cafes, as well as home delivery, home delivery, stalls and outdoor stalls, shops without central power supply. This model is consistent with the requirements of the Kenyan financial legislation and provides remote connection to the KRA.
 .Print "logo"
·         Prints "Help"
·         Issue invoices
·         Operate the "Calculator"
·         Operate the "Fiscal Printer"
·         Operate the "Restaurant"
·         - Up to 40 client accounts
·         - Dividing the order for bar and kitchen
·         - 30 simultaneous operators
·         Warehouse functions
·         Automatic switch off at set time
·         Enter price at the time of sale
·         Issued reports with and without reset
·         Issued reports on articles operators safe, tax groups, classes, departments, available quantities, open accounts
·         Reminds expired service contract
·         Available parameter recovery
·         Calculates biorhythms and shows what will be your physical, emotional and intellectual state for a period of 1 month.
DATECS MP55
Up to 9999 up to 30 000
Item name length up to 22 characters
Maximal Sold quantity of one item up to 99 999,999 kg
Tax type VAT, up to 8 tax groups          
Stands up to 10 up to 99
Departments up to 10 up to 99
Number of operators up to 30 (of which 2 active) up to 30 (of these 30 active)
Maximal number of sales in one receipt more than 150 more than 300 sales
Types of service
• ECR which serves one stand
• Waiter service
Types of payment • Cash, check, card, credit
• Cash with alternative currency: USD or EUR
Fiscal memory Non-volatile, can keep up to 2400 reports
Journal Stored in an EJ card or with postponed printing Recorded stored in a SD (EJ) card (up to 2 mln. lines)
Thermal printer type MLT4280KS-P1
Printer speed 12 lines/sec
Graphical logo Suported size 384x96 dots Suported size 384x96 dots (384x336 dots)
Consumable - thermal paper • Paper width 2x28 mm, thickness 60÷72µm, roll diameter up to 65 mm
• Paper width 57 mm, thickness 60÷72µm, roll diameter up to 65 mm
Operator’s display LCD 2 lines x 16 characters Graphic LCD, up to 4 lines and up to 22 char/line
Customer’s display Alpha-numeric LCD 2 lines x 16 characters
Power supply AC 110÷240V 50-60 Hz DC 12V 2500mA
Li-Ion battery Yes Option
Clock/calendar Stores information for at least 90 days after switching off the ECR
Interface and additional device
GPRS Option External or Built in
DATECS DP50
KEYBOARD 29 Keys
CUSTOMER’S (Option)                                
Alpha-numeric 2 lines x 16 characters, LCD
PRINTER
Thermal printer MLT-289
Speed: up to 12 lines / sec
42 characters per line or 2 lines x 18 characters
PAPER TYPE 57 mm / Ô 55 mm, thickness 60 µm
2 x 28 mm / Ô 55 mm, thickness 60 µm
POWER SUPPLYCONSUMPTION
DC 9V / 1A
Li-ION battery - 7.4V / 2000mAh
DIMENSIONS ( W x D x H ), mm 190 x 65 x 87
WEIGHT+ paper roll, kg 0.530
INTERFACE USB port for connection with PC.
FEATURES
1000 PLUs;
4 departments;
8 TAX groups;
Up to 30 Operators names & passwords;
Clock / Calendar;
Modes:
 - REG registration;
 - X reports;
 - Z reports;

- Communication with PC.

Thursday, 24 July 2014

7 The Ten Golden Rules on Living the Good Life

7. Be a Responsible Human BeingApproach yourself with honesty and thoroughness; maintain a kind of spiritual hygiene; stop the blame-shifting for your errors and shortcomings. Be honest with yourself and be prepared to assume responsibility and accept consequences. This rule comes from Pythagoras, the famous mathematician and mystic, and has special relevance for all of us because of the common human tendency to reject responsibility for wrongdoing. Very few individuals are willing to hold themselves accountable for the errors and mishaps that inevitably occur in life.  Instead, they tend to foist these situations off on others complaining of circumstances “beyond their control.” There are, of course, situations that occasionally sweep us along, against which we have little or no recourse. But the far more typical tendency is to find ourselves in dilemmas of our own creation — dilemmas for which we refuse to be held accountable. How many times does the average person say something like, “It really wasn’t my fault. If only John or Mary had acted differently then I would not have responded as I did.” Cop-outs like these are the standard reaction for most people. They reflect an infinite human capacity for rationalization, finger-pointing, and denial of responsibility. Unfortunately, this penchant for excuses and self-exemption has negative consequences. People who feed themselves a steady diet of exonerating fiction are in danger of living life in bad faith — more, they risk corrupting their very essence as a human being.

9...The Ten Golden Rules on Living the Good Life

9 The Ten Golden Rules on Living the Good Life

9. Don’t Do Evil to Others. Evildoing is a dangerous habit, a kind of reflex too quickly resorted to and too easily justified that has a lasting and damaging effect upon the quest for the good life. Harming others claims two victims—the receiver of the harm, and the victimizer, the one who does harm.
Contemporary society is filled with mixed messages when it comes to the treatment of our fellow human beings. The message of the Judaeo-Christian religious heritage, for instance, is that doing evil to others is a sin, extolling the virtues of mercy, forgiveness, charity, love, and pacifism. Yet, as we all know, in practice these inspiring ideals tend to be in very short supply. Modern society is a competitive, hard-bitten environment strongly inclined to advocate self-advantage at the expense of the “other.” Under these conditions, it is not surprising that people are often prepared to harm their fellow human beings. These activities are frequently justified by invoking premises such as “payback,” “leveling scores,” or “doing unto others, before they can do unto you.” Implicit in all of these phrases is the notion that malice towards others can be justified on either a reciprocal basis or as a pre-emptive gesture in advance of anticipated injury. What is not considered here are the effects these attempts to render evil have upon the person engaging in such attempts. Our culture has naively assumed that “getting even” is an acceptable response to wrongdoing — that one bad-turn deserves another. What we fail to understand is the psychological, emotional, and spiritual impact victimizing others has upon the victimizer.

10 The Ten Golden Rules on Living the Good Life

10. Kindness towards others tends to be rewardedKindness to others is a good habit that supports and reinforces the quest for the good life. Helping others bestows a sense of satisfaction that has two beneficiaries—the beneficiary, the receiver of the help, and the benefactor, the one who provides the help.
Many of the world’s great religions speak of an obligation to extend kindness to others. But these deeds are often advocated as an investment toward future salvation — as the admission ticket to paradise. That’s not the case for the ancient Greeks, however, who saw kindness through the lens of reason, emphasizing the positive effects acts of kindness have not just on the receiver of kindness but to the giver of kindness as well, not for the salvation of the soul in the afterlife, but in this life. Simply put, kindness tends to return to those who do kind deeds, as Aesop demonstrated in his colourful fable of a little mouse cutting the net to free the big lion. Aesop lived in the 6th century B.C. and acquired a great reputation in antiquity for the instruction he offered in his delightful tales. Despite the passage of many centuries, Aesop’s counsels have stood the test of time because in truth, they are timeless observations on the human condition; as relevant and meaningful today as they were 2,500 years ago.

Tuesday, 15 July 2014

8 The Ten Golden Rules on Living the Good Life

The Ten Golden Rules on Living the Good Life


8. Don’t Be a Prosperous Fool. Prosperity by itself, is not a cure-all against an ill-led life, and may be a source of dangerous foolishness. Money is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for the good life, for happiness and wisdom. Prosperity has different meanings to different people. For some, prosperity is about the accumulation of wealth in the form of money, real estate and equities. For others, prosperity is about the accumulation of power and the achievement of status that comes with appointment to business or government positions. In either case, prosperity requires wisdom: the rational use of one’s resources and in the absence of such wisdom, Aeschylus was correct to speak of prosperous fools.

Tuesday, 8 July 2014

6 The Ten Golden Rules on Living the Good Life ETR MACHINE


6. Avoid Excess. Live life in harmony and balance. Avoid excesses. Even good things, pursued or attained without moderation, can become a source of misery and suffering. This rule is echoed in the writings of ancient Greek thinkers who viewed moderation as nothing less than a solution to life’s riddle. The idea of avoiding the many opportunities for excess was a prime ingredient in a life properly lived, as summarized in Solon’s prescription “Nothing in Excess” (6th Century B.C.).  The Greeks fully grasped the high costs of passionate excess. They correctly understood that when people violate the limits of a reasonable mean, they pay penalties ranging from countervailing frustrations to utter catastrophe. It is for this reason that they prized ideals such as measure, balance, harmony, and proportion as much as they did, the parameters within which productive living can proceed. If, however, excess is allowed to destroy harmony and balance, then the life worth living becomes impossible to obtain.