Bioversity

You may have heard of a little project featured on CBS' 60 Minutes that might save the world someday -- they call it the Doomsday Vault. Its goal: to catalog and preserve all the various strains of seeds in the world. Funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, this UN-sanctioned project is a joint effort between the USDA and Bioversity. Bioversity found themselves needing a consulting firm which could provide both architectural expertise as well as a strong .NET developer who could mentor their existing staff.

Enter Circaware. Believing in the cause the project strives to reach, Circaware has donated a good portion of its base frameworks to the open source community, as the Doomsday Vault project will be open source as well. (This project is still under heavy development)

Croyle & Associates

Circaware delivered a Call Center front end as a .NET 1.1 Windows Forms application in less than 5 days to meet this customer's deadline.

LightEdge Solutions

Being an end-to-end network service provider, LightEdge Solutions needed to both automate the provisioning of Exchange users and allow customers to administer their own email accounts, users, groups, contacts, and BlackBerry devices.

Circaware was able to reverse engineer the proper Active Directory settings and Exchange interactions and wrap them into a convenient web service. A PHP-based consumer was written to help their linux-based web portal code consume this web service

Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield

When Wellmark needed help revamping their real-time ratings engine for their public website, they called upon Circaware to deliver a fast, robust solution. Written mostly in stored procedures within SQL Server, deadlocks and timeout errors were eradicated and a caching system was implemented to minimize resource usage.

Wells Fargo Home Mortgage

On the cusp of the mortgage bubble, Wells Fargo Home Mortgage needed its internal web applications to access the mainframe with less latency, better stability, and greater throughput.

Circaware was tasked with designing and implementing this layer of code. Four months and over 100,000 lines of C# code later, Wells Fargo Home Mortgage was processing on average 15x the number of CICS transactions per day and over 10x the uptime on their servers.