Vizuly
Vizuly was founded in 2016 by Thomas Gonzalez, an award winning data visualization designer, developer, and public speaker. After spending 15 years designing and developing specialized data visualization solutions for hundreds of clients, Mr. Gonzalez saw a better way to make reusable JavaScript based data visualization components. Combining the powerful D3.js library with a lightweight and expressive reusable component API Mr. Gonzalez created Vizuly. The goal in creating Vizuly was to make a data visualization library that was both approachable by novice developers while also providing an unrestricted and flexible API that allows for developers to create highly customized and advanced solutions. Since its release in 2016, Vizuly has been downloaded by thousands of users and is in use at Fortune 500 and start up companies alike.
Antenna House
Founded in 1984, Antenna House, Inc. is a global software company that works to make documentation development and processing easier every single day. Antenna House specializes in providing enterprise solutions for high volume, automated document formatting, and conversion needs. Their signature product, AH Formatter, is a powerful PDF formatting engine that is based on the W3C recommendations for XSL-FO and CSS and has long been recognized as the most powerful and proven standards-based formatting software available. Today, Antenna House software is used worldwide to produce millions of pages daily in a wide range of industries including financial services, aerospace/defense, automotive, telecommunications, and health care.
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.