Sausage Software

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sausage_Software an entity of type: Thing

Sausage Software was an Australian software company, founded by entrepreneur Steve Outtrim, which produced one of the world's most successful web editors: the HotDog web authoring tool. The product and company name have since been purchased by an Australian consulting firm, SMS Management & Technology. HotDog and the company became the 'dotcom darling' of the Australian media receiving a large amount of media exposure due to the young age of the company's founder and staff featuring pinball machines and a pool table in the company's reception area. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Sausage Software
rdf:langString Sausage Software
rdf:langString Sausage Software
xsd:integer 6162149
xsd:integer 1109147949
xsd:date 1996-10-20
rdf:langString Merged into SMS Management & Technology in 2000
rdf:langString Melbourne, Australia
rdf:langString Kevin Pownall
rdf:langString Marty Hill
rdf:langString Adrian Vanzyl
rdf:langString Jim Paulyshyn
rdf:langString Steve Meltzer
rdf:langString File:Sausagesoftwarelogo.png
rdf:langString Software
rdf:langString About
rdf:langString Sausage Software was an Australian software company, founded by entrepreneur Steve Outtrim, which produced one of the world's most successful web editors: the HotDog web authoring tool. The product and company name have since been purchased by an Australian consulting firm, SMS Management & Technology. HotDog and the company became the 'dotcom darling' of the Australian media receiving a large amount of media exposure due to the young age of the company's founder and staff featuring pinball machines and a pool table in the company's reception area. Sausage Software also invested in various other pioneering software strategies and products: * A range of small independent software products called "snaglets" * A unique freeware texture generator called Reptile * An early micro-payment system called the eVend Cashlet * A Java Electronic Commerce Server (JECS), a generalized middleware layer serving Java Applets with database data on request via an XML-like request/response protocol. Their website was one of the most popular at the time, receiving 250,000 hits per day in 1996.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 7702
rdf:langString Merged into SMS Management & Technology in 2000

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