Redgate Software
Redgate Software counts Microsoft, HP, Sage, Bank of America, AT&T, the US Treasury and over 9,000 other leading organizations as customers of its software development tools. There are over 100,000 Microsoft technology DBAs, developers and testers currently using Redgate products. The company believes that by producing simple tools that solve the technical problems of Microsoft technology professionals it will continue to add value to the software development community. Therefore, it does not sell 'integrated' software with large, often unnecessary, feature sets. Redgate was founded in 1999 and moved to Cambridge at the start of the year 2000. It is a privately owned and managed company. Its focus is on Microsoft technologies. Redgate was chosen as a Global Gold Launch Partner for Microsoft Visual Studio .NET and are a Visual Studio Integration Program partner.
Layer2
Layer2 is a market-leading provider of data integration and document synchronization solutions for the Microsoft Cloud, focusing on Office 365, SharePoint and Azure. Regional implementation partners and more than 3,200 companies worldwide trust in Layer2 products to keep data and files in sync between 150+ systems and apps in the cloud and on-premises.
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.
PowerBASIC
The history of PowerBASIC compilers goes back over 25 years. That's when Bob Zale, PowerBASIC's founder, created BASIC/Z, the first interactive compiler for CP/M and MDOS. It was extended to MS-DOS, and in 1987 Borland published it as the now legendary Turbo BASIC. The compiler became officially known as PowerBASIC in 1990 when Bob Zale founded PowerBASIC Inc.