Coghead

Coghead was a web application company based out of Redwood City, California. The company offered a web-based service for building and hosting custom online database applications. Applications were built around custom data collections (similar to tables) and were typically designed to facilitate management of, and collaboration on, business data. Examples of Coghead's "gallery" applications include project management, simple Customer relationship management, bug tracking and extreme programming.

Coghead
Privately held company
Industryweb development
Founded2003
HeadquartersRedwood City, California, United States
Productsweb applications
Number of employees
23 (2007)
Websitewww.coghead.com

Coghead's service was available through a limited-access beta program before "going live" for free trial accounts in April, 2007. Coghead launched a paid subscription plans in June, 2007.

On February 19, 2009, Coghead announced that its intellectual property assets (its 'service') had been acquired by SAP AG (NYSE:SAP).[1]

Product

Coghead's product was a fully hosted environment for building, accessing, and maintaining applications and the associated business data. Like other so-called "Web 2.0" companies, Coghead built its product around the idea of "software as a service" or (as the company prefers[2] ) "webware," a term coined by Rafe Needleman, former CNET.com editor and chief blogger for Webware.

The product was intended to allow users to design a range of applications from scratch using only a drag and drop, WYSIWYG user interface, with very limited scripting or coding (if any) required. Coghead described its target audience as "tech-savvy businesspeople," and as such tried to limit the amount of programming or design experience required to author applications in its platform.

Coghead also offered its paid subscribers the ability to develop and publish "Coglets," web forms that allowed site visitors to view data in, or submit data into, the host's Coghead database.

On February 19, 2009, Coghead announced that SAP AG had acquired the Coghead service through an asset purchase.[1]

The SAP asset purchase closed in the 1st Quarter 2009. Immediately upon closing the asset purchase, the public-facing service was taken off-line by SAP as they prepared to integrate the Coghead code with other SAP assets. This forced many of Coghead's customers to find alternative solutions.

gollark: Also, we can't really.
gollark: Emotions are weird evolved heuristics for some situations. I don't know why you'd want to build them into our neural networks.
gollark: DALL-E Mini appears to have entered the public sphere mere months (I think?) after being released.
gollark: There is DALL-E 2 now. DALL-E Mini isn't actually that related (it's a hobbyist project).
gollark: * DALL-E Mini, even.

References

  1. Scott Austin (2009-02-19). "Turning out the lights - Coghead". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2009-02-19.
  2. Paul McNamara. "'SaaS' - This is No Way to Start a Revolution". Archived from the original on 2007-06-22. Retrieved 2007-06-11.
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