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CUSTOM SOFTWARE SOLUTIONS
A LOOK AT SOME APPLICATIONS WE WROTE.

We've been involved in the design, development, and implementation of more than a hundred custom software products, from commercially available applications to niche solutions. We've worked as a subcontractor to large development houses writing image manipulation tools, and we've done private-lavel development for big companies who don't want you to know we did their development.

Some products we're proud of:

      ID Maker
Our most-recent development project; the bulk of the software development was handled by a big-wig software firm in Irvine, California but our expertise in device communication got us an important piece of the project. We wrote the interface layer that handles all communications between the application and any device that connects to it -- cameras, digital scanners, TWAIN devices, thumbprint scanners and more. That's us.
 
 
      Autofutures Desktop
We were involved in every detail from the design and development to the packaging and release. Here's an application the delivers and summarizes automotive forecast data quicker than Microsoft Excel, and includes a complex forecasting algorythm, too.
 
 
      2G NoteWorks
Here's a home-grown product we wrote out of necessity. We hate Windows Notepad, and back in 1994 we re-wrote it, creating our own "notepad killer". Now we're two or three releases in to our fourth full re-write of the product, and most of our developers use it, too.
 
 
      Mr. Poster
And speaking of homegrown projects, we absolutely love Mr. Poster. At its simplest, it's just a program that takes and image and prints it across multiple pages, but it's a hundred times better than any alternative we could find. Quicker. Higher-resolution images. PDF device support. A4 paper sizes. So much more. You'll probably never need to turn a JPG into an image; but if you do -- this is the product you're going to want to use.
 
 
      AwardMaker
Back in 1998, we handled the initial design and wrote every line of code (over a million lines of C++) to build AwardMaker 98. We were also involved in the AwardMaker 2000 project, designed the interface for AwardMaker Online, and have otherwise been involed in just about every version of AwardMaker going back to Laser Award Maker, over ten years ago.