MKS Inc.

MKS, Inc (formerly called Mortice Kern Systems) is a subsidiary of PTC, Inc. It was previously a multinational independent software vendor that was acquired by Parametric Technology Corporation (now PTC) on May 31, 2011.[1] MKS operated in the Application Lifecycle Management (ALM) and Systems Administration market segments.[2]

MKS Inc.
Formerly
Mortice Kern Systems
Subsidiary
IndustryComputer software
FateAcquired by PTC, Inc.
Founded1984 (1984)
Headquarters
ProductsIntegrity software
Websitewww.ptc.com/products/integrity/ 

Integrity, a PTC Product manages systems and software development processes and connects engineering artifacts, including requirements, models, code and test, ensuring comprehensive lifecycle traceability.

PTC's Integrity Business Unit supports customers[3] across these four core industries: Automotive, Aerospace & Defense, High Tech Electronics and Medical Devices.

History

The early years 1984–2000: inception, interoperability and going public

Previously named Mortice Kern Systems, MKS was founded in 1984 by four University of Waterloo students, Randall Howard, Alex White, Trevor Thompson and Steve Izma. The company, founded initially as a consulting group, delivered to market its first product, MKS Toolkit, in 1985.

In 1987, MKS stepped into the version control market with a product called MKS RCS, which was renamed to MKS Source Integrity in 1992, deciding at that time to put strategic emphasis and focus expansion on the software configuration management marketplace, a segment of what is now known as Application Lifecycle Management (ALM).

In 1997 MKS began development of an enterprise version management system that formed the underlying architecture of the MKS Integrity ALM product offered today. This initiative was further realized in 1999 when MKS invested the bulk of its R&D efforts towards re-designing MKS Source Integrity as a multi-tier Java EE platform to address the needs of large enterprise installations.

In 1998 MKS purchased the Implementer product and division of Silvon Software, based out of Chicago, Illinois, to add AS/400 support to its ALM product line. Continuing with acquisitions, in 1999 the Interoperability Business Unit merged with DataFocus Inc., a long time OEM partner, and was charged with the evolution of the MKS Toolkit and NuTCRACKER products.

In the 1999–2000 timeframe, the company also embarked on a web content management strategy with the launch of a product called Web Integrity. This precipitated a spin-off strategy, resulting in the formation of a company called Vertical Sky. This short-lived venture was not successful, and the company abandoned its content management product and regrouped and rebuilt under the MKS brand name in 2001.

2001–2008: The rise of application lifecycle management

In 2001, following the company's restructuring and refinancing, MKS shifted its primary focus to the enterprise market, expanding from its desktop-based version control and defect tracking system to the multi-tier software change and configuration management (SCM) system it had been developing technically since 1997. The new product, now known as MKS Integrity, had a Java EE foundation and was brought to market in June, 2001. Since that time, the company has expanded feature sets beyond SCM, into what is now called in the marketplace, Application Lifecycle Management (ALM), with the incorporation of requirements management and release management in 2005, and test management and portfolio management in 2006. As of 2006, the ALM revenues for the company constitute over 80% of the annual revenues (MKS Inc. (2006-06-07). "MKS Announces Record Revenue and Earnings for Fiscal 2006" (Press release). MKS Inc. Retrieved 2006-11-08.).

In late 2005 MKS opened an office in Japan where the company began to offer local service and support for their customer base in countries such as Australia, China, Japan, Korea and Singapore.

By October 2006, the Interoperability Division of MKS announced the release of MKS X/Server - technology, SCO XVision Eclipse and the SCO Wintif, that was rebranded after being acquired from SCO.

In 2001 Philip C. Deck, join the company and was appointed CEO. Shortly after, Michael W. Harris, joined and was appointed President and COO in July 2002, and Douglas Sawatzky, formerly VP Finance, as Chief Financial Officer in February, 2006.

Throughout 2006–2008 MKS was recognized by industry analysts and PR firms as a strong contender in the ALM market and continued to receive industry accolades for its strong technical offerings:

  • Company Recognized by SD Times as an Innovation Leader for Fourth Straight Year[4]
  • In 2008 Forrester proclaims MKS as the leader in requirements management in the independent research report[5]
  • MKS positioned in the 'Leaders' quadrant in Gartner's first Magic Quadrant for Software Change and Configuration Management (SCCM) for Distributed Platforms[6]
  • MKS positioned as an influential vendor in the ALM Vendor Report by independent analyst firm, Voke Inc.[7]

In late 2007 and early 2008 the company acted upon growing success in the embedded systems market and focused its strategy both in terms of sales and development on large global organizations in the automotive, aerospace/defense, medical device and mobile device sectors.

2009–2010: Consolidation of development markets

With the current industry focus the company is seeing the advanced product development organizations, those with a combination software and hardware focus, forcing the consolidation of the traditional product development and software development life-cycles.

The accolades continued for MKS Integrity with more from the analyst and PR firms:

  • Gartner positioned MKS as a leader in the 2009 Magic Quadrant for Software Change and Configuration Management (SCCM) for Distributed Platform[8]
  • Forrester named MKS as a leader in Agile development management tools in Forrester Research Inc., May 2010.[9]

In late 2009 Michael W. Harris was appointed as the company's President and CEO while Philip C. Deck was appointed Executive Chairman and continues his role as Chairman of the Board of Directors.[10]

August 23, 2010 Charlie Janes returns to MKS and is appointed Vice President of Sales for North America.

In September, 2010, Andrew M. Wertkin was appointed Chief Technology Officer (CTO).[11]

November 3, 2010, Michelle Dickey joined MKS as Vice President Federal Sales to spearhead a team for the North American Government market.

2011: The Acquisition of MKS Inc.

On May 31, 2011, it was announced that PTC had completed the acquisition of MKS and that MKS would operate as the Integrity Business Unit of PTC going forward.[12]

2016: PTC Announces closure of former MKS office in Waterloo.

By mid 2017 all development staff working on former MKS products are laid off, only tiny support staff is left to support now legacy Integrity software.

Timeline

  • 1984: Founded
  • 1985: First release of MKS Toolkit
  • 1987: First release of MKS RCS
  • 1992: MKS RCS renamed MKS Source Integrity
  • 1997: MKS goes public on Toronto Stock Exchange under trading symbol MKX
  • 1998: Acquisition of the Implementer product line from Silvon Software, broadening its platform (iSeries) reach and marketshare
  • 1999: Acquisition of Datafocus, a longtime OEM customer of the MKS Toolkit product line.
  • 2000: Vertical Sky begins and ends
  • 2000: Founder and CEO Randall Howard leaves the company
  • 2001: Philip C. Deck joins MKS as CEO and chairman
  • 2001: MKS Source Integrity Enterprise (multi-tier Java EE architecture) launched (later renamed to MKS Integrity)
  • 2002: MKS officially changes its name from Mortice Kern Systems to MKS
  • 2002: Introduced federated server model for remote geographic team support (an alternative to replication) capability built into MKS Integrity (MKS Inc. (2002-09-18). "MKS Announces Major Upgrades to its Enterprise SCM Solution" (Press release). MKS Inc. Retrieved 2005-11-08.)
  • 2005: First release of requirements management feature set built within the MKS Integrity (MKS Inc. (2005-02-01). "MKS Announces MKS Integrity Suite 2005" (Press release). MKS Inc. Retrieved 2005-11-08.)
  • 2005: Opening of Asia Pacific division in Singapore (MKS Inc. (2006-12-05). "MKS Establishes Asia/Pacific Operations" (Press release). MKS Inc. Retrieved 2005-11-08.)
  • 2006: First release of portfolio management capability into MKS Integrity (MKS Inc. (2006-05-24). "MKS Redefines Application Lifecycle Management Market" (Press release). MKS Inc. Retrieved 2006-11-08.)
  • 2006: (MKS Inc. (2006-06-07). "MKS Announces Record Revenue and Earnings for Fiscal 2006" (Press release). MKS Inc. Retrieved 2006-11-08.
  • 2006: First release of MKS X/Server (technology acquired from SCO)
  • 2009: Official release of MKS Integrity 2009 (MKS Inc. (2009-09-16). "MKS Extends Market Wide Leadership with MKS Integrity 2009" (Press release). MKS Inc. Retrieved 2009-09-16.) and launch of Intelligent ALM (tm) solution positioning.
  • 2009: Michael W. Harris appointed President and CEO and Philip C. Deck appointed as Executive Chairman
  • 2010: Andrew M. Wertkin appointed Chief Technology Officer (CTO) (MKS Inc. (2010-09-21). "MKS Appoints New CTO to Further Extend Technology Leadership" (Press release). MKS Inc. Retrieved 2010-09-21.)
  • 2011: MKS acquired by Parametric Technology Corporation PTC (PTC (2011-05-31). "PTC Acquires MKS" (Press release).)
gollark: ```httposmarks@fenrir /tmp> curl -I https://osmarks.tk/HTTP/2 200 server: nginx/1.18.0date: Sat, 26 Sep 2020 21:48:23 GMTcontent-type: text/htmlcontent-length: 11144last-modified: Mon, 21 Sep 2020 17:33:13 GMTetag: "5f68e3d9-2b88"strict-transport-security: max-age=63072000; preload; includeSubDomainsreferrer-policy: strict-origin-when-cross-originaccept-ranges: bytes```
gollark: `curl -I` can do that.
gollark: You should be able to send HEAD requests and read the `Content-Length` header.
gollark: I think much of the API uses UTF-16, because they wanted to be all international back when it was fixed-width UCS-2 and actually made some sense.
gollark: Because Windows bad and legacy stuff.

See also

References

  1. PTC (2011-05-31). "Open Letter to MKS Customers: PTC Acquires MKS" (PDF). PTC, Inc. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-20. Retrieved 2011-09-16.
  2. "MKS Inc.: Private Company Information". Retrieved 2016-11-22.
  3. "MKS Customers". Archived from the original on 2011-03-20. Retrieved 2011-03-23.
  4. Software Development Times (2006-06-01). "MKS Hits a Home Run with SD Times - Company Recognized as an Innovation Leader for Fourth Straight Year" (Press release). SD Times. Retrieved 2010-06-03.
  5. Forrester Research Inc. (2008-05-31). "The Forrester Wave(tm): Requirements Management, Q2 2008" (Press release). Forrester Research Inc. Retrieved 2010-06-02.
  6. Gartner Inc. (2008-01-28). "Magic Quadrant for Software Change and Configuration Management (SCCM) for Distributed Platforms" (Press release). Gartner Inc. Retrieved 2010-06-03.
  7. Voke Inc. (2008-08-07). "MKS positioned as an influential vendor in the ALM Vendor Report by independent analyst firm, Voke Inc" (Press release). Voke Inc. Retrieved 2010-06-03.
  8. Gartner Inc. (2009-04-23). "2009 Magic Quadrant for Software Change and Configuration Management (SCCM) for Distributed Platform" (Press release). Gartner Inc. Retrieved 2010-06-03.
  9. Forrester Research Inc. (2010-05-13). "The Forrester Wave(TM): Agile Development Management Tools, Q2 2010" (Press release). Forrester Research Inc. Retrieved 2010-06-03.
  10. "MKS Announces Changes to Leadership Structure" (Press release). 2009-11-24. Archived from the original on 2010-05-24.
  11. "MKS Appoints New CTO to Further Extend Technology Leadership". Retrieved 2010-09-21.
  12. "PTC Sets New Standard for Managing Hardware and Software Development Lifecycles with MKS Integrity Acquisition" (Press release). PTC, Inc. 2011-05-31.
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