Technical Capabilities
MySQL and postgreSQL are Open Source databases used by Feratech. The former falls under the GPL license, while the latter is under the BSD Open Source license. For more information about these licenses, please visit http://www.opensource.org/licenses. We also specialize in MySQL to postgreSQL migration.
Feratech utilizes various dynamic scripting languages, such as ASP, PHP and ASP to PHP migration. Our primary scripting language is PHP, a BSD-style Open Source license. To see a PHP site demonstration complete with user account system and n-level categorization, check out the free financial directory, a Feratech technology demo.
The following are among the Open Standards that Feratech uses: LDap for directory information, Imap for mail, ICS for calendars, SOAP for web services and SSL and SSH.
Another advantage of Feratech includes GNU, the suite of free software components that provide all the functions of a Unix operating system without the detriments of Unix. For more information, visit www.fsf.org.
All the websites that Feratech hosts fall under the Apache webserver, plus modules, mod rewritre, modssl and open ssh, which is an implementation of an SS standard.
BIND-DNS server is Open Source software (www.ISC.org). The BIND-DNS Server is used on the vast majority of name serving machines on the Internet, providing a robust and stable architecture on top of which our company’s naming architecture can be built. The resolver library included in the BIND distribution provides the standard APIs for translation between domain names and Internet addresses and is intended to be linked with applications requiring name service.
Linux is a free, Unix-type operating system. It may be used for a wide variety of purposes including networking, software development, and as an end-user platform. Linux is often considered an excellent, low-cost alternative to other more expensive operating systems
Java technology is multi-faceted, serving as both a programming language and a platform. The Java programming language is unusual in that a program is both compiled and interpreted. With the compiler, first you translate a program into an intermediate language called Java bytecodes —the platform-independent codes interpreted by the interpreter on the Java platform. The interpreter parses and runs each Java bytecode instruction on the computer. Compilation happens just once; interpretation occurs each time the program is executed.
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