Arc Technology Group

Aesiq, Inc d/b/a Arc Technology Group is a web development and web content management system firm specializing in Joomla headquartered in Evanston, Illinois.

Arc Technology Group
Private
IndustryContent Management, IT services, IT consulting
FoundedEvanston, Illinois, U.S.
(May 18, 2000 (2000-05-18))
Headquarters
Chicago, Illinois
,
U.S.
Area served
Worldwide
Revenue$1.6+ million (2011)[1]
Number of employees
5
Websitewww.arctg.com

Arc Technology Group has offices in Evanston, IL and Mainz, Germany and primarily focus on content management and open source software.

History

Robert Jacobi co-founded Arc Technology Group as a firm specializing in Java[2] in 2000 and continues to serve as president. According to Chicago Sun-Times, Jacobi was inspired by the movie WarGames and early bulletin board systems to program and venture into content management.

Arc Technology Group has been a member and graduate of the Evanston Technology Innovation Center[3] since 2001. Arc Technology Group has worked with TIC firms on many projects including streaming media.[4]

Joomla

Arc Technology Group's focus on open source content management began in 2004 with Mambo and quickly turned to Joomla in 2005. In 2011, Arc released a number of extensions for Joomla licensed under the GPL.

gollark: And which consumes several gigabytes of RAM and disk space, naturally.
gollark: Like node.js, and electron.
gollark: Horrible abuses of javascript?
gollark: I left a project for about half a year and came back to npm alerting me about about 10 security vulnerabilities in deps.
gollark: I kind of like JS on the backend because it's very quick for me to write somewhat working stuff, but dislike it because it's slow, untyped and will inevitably break in 2 months after one of 400 dependencies fails.

References

  1. Gabrielle Tompkins (July 2011). "Crain's Chicago Business Chicago-area Web Developers". Archived from the original on 2011-10-05. Retrieved 2011-07-25.
  2. Dave Lundy (23 August 2001). "Java central to firm President of Aesiq in Evanston began programming at about age 10". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on 6 November 2012.
  3. Ann Meyer (24 October 2005). "Incubators give companies a start". Chicago Tribune.
  4. Todd Allen (8 April 2002). "Local companies plunge into streaming media's tide". Chicago Tribune.
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