MindFusion Group
MindFusion Group was founded 2001 in Sofia, Bulgaria. The company started operations by providing outsourcing services to clients from all over the world. Project work was carefully managed to ensure the company's stable growth and positive financial results. During 2003 MindFusion devoted its resources to developing its first programming tool - an ActiveX diagramming control. The product soon started to attract numerous clients thanks to the talent of its creators. MindFusion quickly evolved from a small outsourcing firm to a larger organization dedicated to the development of reusable programming components and focusing with utmost attention and care on its user community - software engineers from all over the world.
Sparx Systems
Sparx Systems specializes in high performance and scalable visual modeling tools for the planning, design and construction of software intensive systems.
With customers in industries ranging from aerospace and automotive engineering to finance, defense, government, entertainment and telecommunications, Sparx Systems is a leading vendor of innovative solutions based on the Unified Modeling Language (UML) and its related specifications. A Contributing Member of the Object Management Group (OMG), Sparx Systems is committed to realizing the potential of model-driven development based on open standards.
The company’s flagship product, Enterprise Architect, has received numerous accolades since its commercial release in August, 2000. Now at version 13, Enterprise Architect is the design tool of choice for 380,000+ registered users world-wide.
jSparrow
jSparrow is a brand of Splendit IT-Consulting GmbH, founded in 2004 in Mauerbach near Vienna, Austria. They specialize in helping companies to optimize their legacy software systems, having software consultants with expertise in both old (Cobol, PL/1, Assembler) and new (Java, .Net) programming platforms. Throughout their consultancy work, clients often asked how to transform existing Java systems to modern and safe Java architecture. The answer was the development of jSparrow, a tool for automatic Java code refactoring.