Our new software release will dramatically improve your medspa business performance while enhancing the customer experience
AestheticsPro is the most complete Aesthetics Software on the market today. HIPAA Cloud Compliant with electronic charting, integrated POS, targeted marketing and results driven reporting; AestheticsPro delivers the tools you need to manage your medical spa business. It is our mission To Provide an All-in-One Cutting Edge Software to the Aesthetics Industry.
Learn More
Award-Winning Medical Office Software Designed for Your Specialty
Succeed and scale your practice with cloud-based, data-backed, AI-powered healthcare software.
RXNT is an ambulatory healthcare technology pioneer that empowers medical practices and healthcare organizations to succeed and scale through innovative, data-backed, AI-powered software.
Graph algorithms interpreter, IDE, debugger, 3D visualizations.
Graphal is an interpreter of a programming language that is mainly oriented to graph algorithms. There is a command line interpreter and a graphical integrated development environment. The IDE contains text editor for programmers, compilation and script output, advanced debugger and visualization window. The progress of the interpreted and debugged graph algorithm can be displayed in 3D scene.
Realistic Workplace Simulations that Show Applicant Skills in Action
Skillfully transforms hiring through AI-powered skill simulations that show you how candidates actually perform before you hire them. Our platform helps companies cut through AI-generated resumes and rehearsed interviews by validating real capabilities in action. Through dynamic job specific simulations and skill-based assessments, companies like Bloomberg and McKinsey have cut screening time by 50% while dramatically improving hire quality.
Alef++, is a new programming language like Perl and Lisp syntax, with a many changing in classical languages designs, her specification designed to be implemented for any VM, by default can access to any private/protected/default Java fields or methods.
The Spiffy framework is a collection of often used helper methods and utility classes used in industry. Such methods and classes solves existing and re-ocuring practical problems and remedies annoying features of the Javalanguage.
Hipo is a hypothetical computer to facilitate the learning of machine language. The student can use hipo to develop simple programs and understand the internal logic of a computer. There is a plan to implement Donald Knuth's MMIX machine language, also.
LiMa means Lightweight Markup Language. It is a parser for an easy to use ASCII/Text-based markup - comparable to Markdown or the Wikipedia-Markup language with special configurable extensions in defining Links and image-resources.
The free online uptime monitoring service with an App is available for iOS and Android.
With the Free Plan, you can monitor up to 50 URLs, check for a website's content (using the keyword monitor), ping your server or monitor your ports in 5-minute intervals. You can create a status page to showcase your uptime. SMS or Call alerts can be bought anytime.
K-automaton is a new parsing (syntactic analysis) machine isomorphous to language. Implemented in Java. Can generate Java code from grammars described in EBNF.
Meaningful acronym and name generator from a list of keywords provided by the user. The software checks that the random words generated exist in the specified language by checking against a spelling engine publicy available as a web service
SenseRank Sys:
- builds the dictionaries (multidim matrices) of words’ values;
- for the set utterance in certain language builds a figure in multidimensional space (in the matrix space) of values (visual schema), which is topological view of sense
YABI93 is an Interpreter for the esoteric programming language Befunge, version "Befunge93". It is written in Java 1.5 and uses Swing for its graphical interface. YABI supports a multilanguage GUI.
phonet4j is the port of a extensible, rule based algortihm for phonetic conversions written by Joerg Michael to java. His code was first published in the computer magazine c't (issue 25/1999, pp. 252). Includes two rulesets for the german language.