Hi,
firstly, thanks for your great blog. I am a UX designer and visit to your blog every now and then to read specific articles that speak to challenges I face in my daily work.
I thought I could make you aware of a new process development tool made by a small company in the south of Africa, called Twenty57. The software is called Linx and it is a drag & drop process programming tool.
Linx generates C# code which can be automated using Windows services and service events, such as timers, directory watch, MSMQ and many more. So, it is really easy to automate, for example, daily data management tasks, standard processes or much else that is repetitive and tedious to do by hand. We use it to create and build our software, test web services for our TDD processes or perform small, but boring and repetitive tasks for us.
We would be thrilled if you would come over to our site and take a look at it. We are currently in beta and the tool is still free. It really can be a great time saver and is easy to understand and use. I am sure you will like it.
Hi, firstly, thanks for your great blog. I am a UX designer and visit to your blog every now and then to read specific articles that speak to challenges I face in my daily work. I thought I could make you aware of a new process development tool made by a small company in the south of Africa, called Twenty57. The software is called Linx and it is a drag & drop process programming tool. Linx generates C# code which can be automated using Windows services and service events, such as timers, directory watch, MSMQ and many more. So, it is really easy to automate, for example, daily data management tasks, standard processes or much else that is repetitive and tedious to do by hand. We use it to create and build our software, test web services for our TDD processes or perform small, but boring and repetitive tasks for us. We would be thrilled if you would come over to our site and take a look at it. We are currently in beta and the tool is still free. It really can be a great time saver and is easy to understand and use. I am sure you will like it.
http://linx.twenty57.com
Thank you, Franz Rodenacker (franz.rodenacker@digiata.com) UX Designer, Digiata (affiliated to Twenty57)