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Finding and hiring a qualified software developer can be
tedious. Failure to find the right individual can result in project
delays because of personality differences, specification changes,
deadline overruns, and insufficient experience and training for the challenge — all
can contribute to the project’s success or failure. And how can you
tell if the candidate is truly qualified for your project? You choose
a good one!
I have developed a wide
variety of information application systems in the past twenty-five
years— from factory floors to human sciences research — in a wide
spectrum of languages and application environments while staying on the cutting edge of information
sciences. And I've done it successfully!
I'm no stranger to success
in high visibility projects:
At the Bank of America
branding specifications and advertising materials are tracked through the compliance
process using software I developed. When issues require the most stringent review, they
are whisked to FINRA for evaluation through my automated routing system using Web 3.0 standards.
When a Federal Express
courier picks up your package, he scans the bar codes on packing
slips with a SuperTracker - using the software I developed at Hand
Held Products. Couriers have been scanning with the SuperTracker for
over 20 years.
At Getrag USA, a German
transmission and axle manufacturer, they schedule production and
verify loading of transaxles destined for General Motors using my
scheduling and shipping verification system. It saves shipping
mistakes as well as fines costing $2500.00 per incident.
At Ross
Perot's EDS, when a customer calls and asks where a specific piece
of equipment is, EDS can respond immediately down to the exact rack
in a specific building, room or cubical. That's because they use an asset
tracking system I developed.
At Publix
markets, truck maintenance record reporting is carried out by my mobile
reporting and data entry application.
North Carolina
State University manages stock flow and pricing at their seven
convenience stores all through my Caseworx perpetual inventory
system.
When ACNielsen
broadened their survey offerings to include supermarket purchases in
the United States, they asked me to design their 23,000 terminal
data collection system. That was in 1987. ACNielsen came back
15 years later to work with me to extend the very same programs into South America!
These application systems endure. They're
written today, and used for years down the road, tailored as needed to
meet customer's growing needs. From hand-held devices to workstations
to LAN's and WAN's, my designs move your data efficiently, with integrity.
I've created systems from
tracking baggage for United Airlines to microvolt stimulators for
testing drug efficacy in monkeys at the University of Washington to
tracking trades on Wall Street for the New York Stock Exchange:
helping to save money through more accurate reporting, allowing
faster data analysis, and creating more efficient
management tools.
I can deliver your
information technology solution quickly and efficiently. And I can
promise that it will provide years of useful functionality. The past
proves it!
It would be a pleasure to
discuss your requirements with you and I look forward to hearing from
you.
Best Regards,
Don Kennedy
tel: 980-322-2339 |