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Posts Tagged ‘Visual WebGui’

DiscountASP.NET Partners with Gizmox, the Developer of Visual WebGui

July 7th, 2009 Jarrett No comments

protectionNew partnership offers customers free hosting on DiscountASP and a markdown on VWG products

July 7, 2009 – DiscountASP, a leader in ASP hosting, announces a partnership with Gizmox, the developer of Visual WebGui, a comprehensive rich Internet, Cloud & SaaS application platform that provides powerful, richer, and faster application development.
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Gizmox Releases First Commercial Edition – The Visual WebGui Professional Studio

February 2nd, 2009 Misc. Editors No comments

Provides simple and fast rich business web application development with up to 90% reduction in development time and the highest levels of security

Gizmox, the developer of Visual WebGui (VWG), today announced the release of the Visual WebGui Professional Studio. The commercial version of the Visual WebGui Studio Suite enables the building of enterprise-class Rich Internet Applications and offers subscribers unlimited technical support with enterprise grade warranty and service level agreement (SLA). The new commercial Studio Suite offers enhanced developer experience (DX), full integration with Visual Studio and enterprise grade scalability and redundancy with server extensions. In addition, new enterprise-class services, such as prototyping, consulting, hot-fixes and more are available in order to optimize the development experience. Visual WebGui’s Studio Suite will offer commercial deployments at absolutely no additional cost.

To date, more than 30,000 Visual WebGui applications have been deployed at companies such as SAP and IBM, and the number is growing daily. In addition, Visual WebGui’s business Rich Internet Applications are in use by leading banks, insurance firms, government and military agencies, aerospace companies and others. To meet the market demand for a Visual WebGui enterprise grade Studio suite, and to accommodate the growing requests from the Visual WebGui community for commercially-warranted products and services built to support mission-critical application deployments, Gizmox is releasing its commercial Studio Suite ahead of schedule. This release will enable developers and enterprises to utilize Visual WebGui’s cost saving value during the recent economic downturn. Read more…

SAP Uses Visual WebGui to Develop Global Test Management Web Application

January 15th, 2009 Luna No comments

Visual WebGui saves SAP more than $720K in development costs for one enterprise application, cutting development time in half

Gizmox, the developer of the Visual WebGui open source platform, today announced that leading software development company SAP saved more than $720,000 in development costs of its web-based global test management system using Visual WebGui’s rapid application development framework. SAP’s NetWeaver UI Test Development team delivered their VWG-based web application in just 9 months using only 2 developers, cutting SAP’s expenditures on development time and personnel costs by more than 50% from the team’s original 5 person, 18 month allocation.

Charged with creating a global, centralized test management application needed to manage testing resources and test plans being developed around the world, SAP’s NetWeaver UI Test Development team was instructed to deliver a high quality solution fast. After toying with ASP.NET, the development team became dissatisfied with the quality and breadth of its controls. SAP considered the use of 3rd party web controls, but the price and complexities involved with implementation became too costly. But after evaluating the advantages of developing with Visual WebGui, SAP adopted the framework. The completed VWG-based application called SNAP (SAP NetWeaver Test Automation Project) delivers a great operational and cost-saving value to SAP. The web-based solution serves more than 500 users worldwide and has earned rave reviews from SAP executives as a highly responsive and usable system. Today, the application’s ongoing maintenance and new releases are handled by an even smaller team than the original 2 developers. Read more…