Chant
Chant is a leading provider of software and services that help organizations gain competitive advantage using speech technology. The company helps organizations identify and implement the most attractive opportunities appropriate for their company and industry. As the first company to provide engine-independent component software for developing desktop, web-enabled, and telephony applications that use speech technology, Chant can help you implement applications that allow you to talk with your computer. Chant was founded on the belief that computers can do more and be easier to use at the same time by taking advantage of speech technology. The company is focused on providing solutions that enable you to do more with your computer by talking with it.
plexityHide.com
With over 10 years experience of OO-development, plexityHide.com knows that things can get complicated, and how to make them simple. PlexityHide often works as consultant in software projects, as developers or as technical project managers. The company is a firm believer of UML and OO-development. It is not platform or tool religious; and uses any tool that gets the job done. Its main product, the phGantTimePackage, consists of approx 42000 lines of Delphi code. It was developed for the Swedish broadcasting company and has been available as an OCX since 1999. It contains extremely powerful Gantt and Schema components, allowing graphical manipulation of time items. It has been used in over 300 hundred different software projects around the globe. Clients include; Swedish Parliament, SVT Swedish broadcasting cooperation, General Motors, Pronyx Metal AB, Ontario Power Generation, US Army Dugway Proving Ground, Kraft Foods, UCLA - NeuroOncology, Hewlett-Packard, Schlumberger.
Abstraction Systems
Established in 2000, Abstraction Systems is dedicated to the development of reliable high quality .NET components and applications. Since its foundation, the company has been providing consulting services and developing component-based software systems for large Swiss companies from the financial and industrial sector. The acquired know-how developing components for large scaled two- and three-tiered systems is now also used to create components for the component market. ToolTipsFactory for .NET is the first result of this diversification and more will follow. The idea for this first commercial component came about because many of the hundreds of users using our systems were complaining about the tool tips being too small and the content too limited to be of much use. With the introduction of early prototypes of the ToolTipsFactory in these corporate applications the complaints changed. Now the users want these kinds of tooltips for all their other windows applications too.