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VT Group is a leading technology integrator, delivering technology and business solutions to complex challenges faced by our government and commercial customers. Our business units—VT Services and subsidiaries VT Milcom, VT Aepco, and VT Griffin— individually and collaboratively leverage technology and proven business expertise to deliver reliable and proven outcomes. Customers trust us to deliver innovative, agile and turnkey solutions that solve their toughest problems.
Stonebranch builds dynamic IT automation solutions that transform business IT environments from simple IT task automation into sophisticated, real-time business service automation, helping organizations achieve the highest possible Return on Automation. No matter the degree of automation, Stonebranch software is simple, modern and secure. Using its universal automation platform, enterprises can seamlessly orchestrate workloads and data across technology ecosystems and silos. Headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia with points of contact and support throughout the Americas, Europe, and Asia, Stonebranch serves some of the world`s largest financial, manufacturing, healthcare, travel, transportation, energy, and technology institutions.
Phillip Hauptman is a Lincoln, NE-based company in the Software and Internet sector.
Infragistics, Inc. is one of the leading companies in Software and Internet industry. Infragistics, Inc. is based in Cranbury, NJ. You can find more information on Infragistics, Inc. at www.infragistics.com
Oblong was founded in 2006 with the goal of creating the next generation of computing interfaces. We`re a company of designers, programmers, and hardware engineers. We`re committed to a full stack approach to technology development. We work on the most interesting problem we can think of, which is how to make computers more flexible, capable, useful, interactive, and empowering. Our Chief Scientist, John Underkoffler, designed the computer interfaces in the film Minority Report. Today we sell commercial versions of the Minority Report computers. These are, famously, gestural systems. But they do much more than simply allow users to point and gesture to interact with computers. (And, in fact, gestures themselves are optional.) These are spatial, networked, multi-user, multi-screen, multi-device computing environments.