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Optym provides transportation software [4] and specializes in the optimization, simulation and analytics of transportation and logistics for railroad, trucking, airline and mining industries. [5] [2] [6] [7] [8] Optym was founded by researcher and academic Dr. Ravindra K. Ahuja in 2000 as Innovative Scheduling, Inc., which rebranded as Optym in ...
PFSweb, Inc. was founded in 1994 as Priority Fulfillment Services, Inc. (PFS) [4] by Texas-based Daisytek International Corporation. [5] [6] The company first specialized in running call centers for clients and then expanded to provide electronic-commerce sales and order processing, product warehousing, packaging, and fulfillment services.
Affiliated Computer Services Inc. (ACS) was a company that provided information technology services as well as business process outsourcing solutions to businesses, government agencies, and non-profit organizations. ACS was based in Dallas, Texas. ACS was ranked at number 341 on the 2010 Fortune 500 list. [2]
In 2000, the company changed its name to International Decision Systems when it went public in a merger with the British company CFS. Two years later in 2003, the company was bought back by the managers of IDS for $25 million. [1] In 2008, IDS filed papers for an IPO hoping to raise $86 million. [2]
Mavenir Systems, Inc. is an American telecommunications software company, created in 2017 as a result of a three-way merger of existing companies and technologies, that develops and supplies cloud-native software to the communications service provider (CSP) market.
John Galt Solutions is a privately held software company that provides forecasting and supply chain planning for mid-market companies. [1] [2]Founded in 1996 and headquartered in Chicago, they claim more than 6,000 customers worldwide use John Galt Solutions products every day.
Sterling Software was an American software company founded in Dallas, Texas, in 1981 by Sterling Williams and brothers Sam and Charles Wyly. [1] The company was acquired by Computer Associates International in 2000 in a stock-for-stock transaction worth $3.3 billion.
Aricent is the successor to Hughes Software Systems, which was established in 1991, as a subsidiary of Hughes Electronics, [3] with funding from Sequoia Capital. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] 1985: Future Software Communications founded by KV Ramani, a TCP/IP stack developer from India which will eventually merge with Hughes Software Systems.