| Partners |
Our partners are suppliers of .Net services or products that sysme1.Net employs in demonstrating .Net capabilities in both our education programs and management seminars. Our partners represent a very special cross-section of .Net providers that we believe in and recommend to our customers. Because sysme1.Net has no compensatory, promotional or other agreements with them, we can say with enthusiasm that they represent the best of breed in their respective markets. Since the products our partners offer are important elements of our .Net teaching and presentation efforts, we work with them to continually refine our quality management process. |
Infragistics is the leading provider of the most complete set of world-class
software components encompassing all major development platforms. Formed by the
merger of ProtoView Development Corporation and Sheridan Software Systems, Inc.,
Infragistics via its UltraWinSuite, UltraWebSuite, and the NetAdvantage Suite
provides a fantastic family of components for the .NET framework. We at
sysme1.Net use this framework to demonstrate to our clients how professional
developers build superior applications while reducing the costs and time
associated with
development.
Wrox
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We like Wrox because it is not a traditional publishing business. We repeatedly
recommend many of Wrox's .Net titles to our clients. Wrox's unique Programmer to
Programmer™ style combined with their unique editorial process makes Wrox
without equal in understanding and satisfying the needs of the .Net community.
The majority of Wrox's publications seem to have the ability to anticipate what
a reader wants, and how a reader wants it. This is evident in both their
traditional publications and their very informative C#Today, ASP Today and P2P
online resource centers.
sysme1.Net
Northwoods Software business model includes licensing their technology to OEMs,
VARs, Systems Integrators and corporate clients. Go.NET for Microsoft .NET is
Northwoods latest product, written entirely in C#, represents Northwoods mission
to being the world leader in diagramming component software. At sysme1.Net we
find great interest for GO.Net among our telcom and process oriented clients
where each day graphic diagramming is becoming higher on their agenda..
Borland continues to deliver on its mission to help customers embrace the
future without abandoning the past. It makes one of the largest R&D commitments
for extending the .Net open Microsoft® .NET framework and architecture. Keeping
pace with the rapid evolution of .Net information technology, Borland will soon
be delivering two new .Net programming languages (Delphi.net and Charlotte) that
many feel will revolutionize the
cost effectiveness and ease of use for building
industrial strength systems both of which utilize a new state of the art .Net
specific IDE. Some feel that Borland is capturing the spirit of .Net
productivity. To many, Borland was the origin of a significant number of .Net's
underlying technologies. It is the former home of Microsoft's chief .Net
architect - Anders Heljsberg. Today, Borland's commitment to .Net technology and
development tools places it on the top tier of .Net innovation.
Sybase
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The new PowerBuilder from Sybase fits comfortably in .Net. It's components and applications
will be able to interoperate with those developed for, by and within the Microsoft.NET framework. Taking advantage of PowerBuilder's unrivaled patent on
objects for data access, the new DataWindow.NET and DataStore.NET will be
accessible from non-PowerBuilder applications and may be used by any .NET
language. PowerBuilder's .NET support involves bringing components from the .NET
Framework into the PowerBuilder IDE. The PowerBuilder.Net IDE boasts a greatly
enhanced productivity based look and feel so that it looks like, and builds
applications with, the user interface features found in .NET. It also gives
developer's access to all .Net Framework components - enabling them to build
.NET-based objects from within PowerBuilder.
Doctordotnet
- likes anything to do with technology - especially .Net. He seems to
spend much of his time with his ears to the ground examining anything that has
to do with .Net and evaluating whether it is worth your time and effort. When he
gets excited about something, then he writes about it - from the boundaries of
.Net technology to .Net management issues to how .Net influences organizational
dynamics. He seems to have a knack for ignoring vendor bias and marketing hype
to report information on how .Net will change tomorrow's landscape while at the
same time enhancing development skills. Because of his unique prospective on
.Net we ask to get him to speak at our major events and conferences and
continually point our clients to his .Net column for unbiased .Net advice