As part of a recent project, Flux Inc. has released a preliminary version of a Flash-based online interactive Business Card Builder. Words cannot describe it as well as a video, so here is a link. Enjoy (and be sure to turn on your speakers)!
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15Jul
Tags: 246, enterprise, enterprisenews, news
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12Jul

Enterprise Intranet Web
Our core enterprise business is bringing people and computing resources together. Our highly militant and organised staff produce what are, paradoxically, the most majestically complex and elegant solutions to virtually any set of problems. We employ best design and build practices to achieve the perfect mix of usability, security, and capability to all of our applications. Starting from our own foundational web platform, we build each application from the bottom up to ensure the most complete fit.
We provide all of our enterprise clients with full source code access, and waive all non-preexisting intellectual property rights — our aim is to build a working relationship, not create a one-way dependency. Please read our enterprise success stories to learn more.
Front-Facing Web and E-Commerce
Everything the customer touches has to be both simple and bewilderingly flexible. We achieve this dichotomy through intuitive web client interface planning, our own modern design touch, and the same web platform technology we use as a starting point for each and every web based application we build.
Data Mining and Data Migration
At the end of any decision process related to making use of, and storing data, it actually does have to be placed onto a platform more suited to its purpose. It’s precisely at this point that our skilled database architects feel right at home. There is no existing data set that we cannot turn into a resource.
IT Infrastructure and Strategy Planning
One of the most impressive advantages contemporary internet access offers us is that we can now, finally, see specialisation take place in computing resource management. Most of us are not in the e-mail business, or are we backup management experts. Yet most businesses still try to handle these highly complex and mission critical tasks on-site when hundreds of companies offer far superior and developed services for a fraction of the cost? Why deal with 100MB Inbox limits when mailboxes over 20GB in size are offered nearly free online by world-class providers? Why worry that a building fire will wipe out your entire backup system when a multitude of online vendors stay awake nights dreaming up ways to make their infrastructure even more impervious to nuclear war. Let the full extent of the market work for you and let us move you in the right direction; we mange the move, you reap the rewards.
Tags: 193, enterprise, enterpriseproducts, products
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14Apr
We’ve been using this little known feature of Basecamp for some time, so I thought I would post it for the benefit of the casual visitor. The good makers of Basecamp have neglected to include a useable collaborative document authoring tool. Since Google has included such a tool as part of the free Google Apps suite, including documents from there into Basecamp seems the natural way to augment what 37-signals have left out. To add a Google Doc to a Basecamp writeboard:
- Create a Google Doc (or spreasheet, presentation, whatever).
- Copy and past the URL of the document (minus the “https:”) into TextPad or Notepad.
- Make a Writeboard in Basecamp, give it any name.
- Paste the following text into the writeboard contents and replace the bold text as required:
<iframe src=”//docs.google.com/a/fluxinc.ca/Doc?docid=asdfkj92399332&hl=en” frameborder=”0″ height=”600″ scrolling=”no” width=”950″></iframe><style type=”text/css”> .Sidebar, .writeboardtitle { display: none; } .col {width: 1024px;}</style> - Save your writeboard, and you’re done! A nice, wide, writeboard with the toolbox hidden to make more space.
Remember to share your Google Doc with however you want to view/edit it — Basecamp permissions do not translate into Google Apps.
Tags: 32, enterprise

