To transform cumbersome IT systems to be more intuitive via innovation with minimal overhead.
Data processing occurs everywhere; from n-tiered corporate systems to stand-alone (desktop) modeling.
Popular n-tier systems use database and application servers, with a GUI (Graphical User Interface) or "front end".
Unix and their variants {BSD, Solaris, Linux} are favorite operating systems to make it happen; being
open systems, following
open standards.
My name is Frederick C. Lee and my company is called
Eccron Technologies. I'm a software developer,
and I use various languages and software tools available on Unix/Linux systems to produce corporate and desktop software.
Corporate n-tier systems are commonly based on Oracle or a hybrid Oracle system using a
browser for the front end, an application server for the middle tier and the database server. These systems commonly use Java and
Oracle's PL/SQL as the middle-tier and server languages, repectively. PL/SQL is the preferred server language to Java in this environment.
Many enterprises employ an
open-source or
web-based system. I have designed and developed web-based systems
following a MVC (Model/View/Controller) design pattern used
in OOP environments; where the 'model' is an XML data vector, the 'View' being the CSS (Cascading Style Sheet) and the
'Controller' being the JavaScript (event handler)/XAJAX/PHP (server) entity.
I've developed Oracle systems on Solaris platforms using Oracle-development and freely-available open-source tools
to produce the highest return-on-investment (roi).
I follow open-standards technologies to develop software and I work with data storage of various forms,
from atomic XML/binary to distributed relational databases.
I also develop Mac software.
The Mac has literally become a software factory with a plethora of
Unix and GUI tools. Making software intuitive requires mastery of various tools, languages, logic designs; as well as interfacing with
other developers in the software-development community across cyberspace.
The name 'Eccron' has no relevances toward physics, cron jobs or an ancient village. It was chosen
essentially for the same reason that 'Exxon' was chosen for an oil company: an inert name that has potential, as I believe the OS X
has great potential in enterprise, government and stand-alone systems.
I've developed Unix-based systems
for assorted clients from the military requiring a security clearance to a private Linux-based publishing company.
Linux and Unix system work extremely well together, and hence, I'm
able to work both on/off my client's server to avoid any development delays.
Eccron Technologies work with
Oracle and all forms of Unix/Linux; particularly with BSD Unix (OS X).
The development platforms are Oracle upon/or Open-Source Unix; and 'Cocoa', a 64-bit GUI on 64-bit Unix (as of OS X (10.5))
which is comprised of Objective-C frameworks. My preferred IDEs are: Apple's Xcode and TextMate.
Eccron's raison d'etre is to create intuitive software for enterprise and stand-alone environments based on Cocoa;
and Open-Source/Standards technologies.