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Telelogic signs US$900,000 contract with major US defense contractor.


Telelogic (Stockholm Exchange: TLOG TLOG Transaction Log
TLOG The League of Gentlemen (UK TV show)
TLOG Training Log (health & fitness)
TLOG Theater Logistics
TLOG The Last Of Gracie (Lima, OH band) 
), a provider of solutions for advanced systems and software development, has announced a volume licensing agreement with a major US-based defense contractor Noun 1. defense contractor - a contractor concerned with the development and manufacture of systems of defense
armed forces, armed services, military, military machine, war machine - the military forces of a nation; "their military is the largest in the region";
, initially worth US$900,000. The agreement includes new licenses for Telelogic tools including DOORS, SYNERGY and TAU tau
n.
Symbol The 19th letter of the Greek alphabet.


tau (tou),
n
.

The initial purchase is the first phase of a three-year strategic agreement that could be worth several million dollars. Today's agreement includes US$750,000 dollars for licenses and US$154,000 dollars for maintenance.

"Our customer is responsible for developing complex, mission- and life-critical systems, with tens of thousands of requirements," said Anders Lidbeck, president and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  of Telelogic AB. "When the stakes are high, DOORS' Dynamic Requirements Management capabilities ensure nothing is lost, overlooked or misunderstood. Telelogic DOORS is the only requirements management tool with Intelligent Traceability to meet the needs of today's complex, continually-evolving development projects."

In conjunction with the agreement, the multi-billion dollar company named DOORS its corporate standard for requirements management. The company's past experience with DOORS, and the product's proven success at other groundbreaking organizations, provided the confidence for this customer to roll out DOORS at its sites worldwide. The Fortune 500 Company particularly liked Telelogic's approach to the product development lifecycle and the integration of DOORS with the TAU Generation 2 toolset for visual modeling, simulation and code generation capabilities.

"Telelogic's best-of-breed tools, our vision and our track record of innovation and dedication were deciding factors in this highly competitive win," Lidbeck said. "We have proven to be customer-driven with a vested interest Vested Interest

A financial or personal stake one entity has in an asset, security, or transaction.

Notes:
For example, if you have a mortgage, your bank has a vested interest on the sale of your house.
See also: Right
 in our customers' long term success."

Named the market leader for requirements management tools by META Group in its 2003 report "Mastering the Requirements of Requirements Management," by Yphise in its 2002 industry report "Requirements Management Tools," and by the Standish Group in its 2003 report "What are your requirements? 2003." DOORS enables users to gather, trace and manage all requirements established for a development project. This ensures that the resulting application is completed on time, within budget, and with all features and functionality originally specified.

Telelogic TAU is an integrated family of software development and testing tools based on widely accepted, standardized languages (UML (Unified Modeling Language) An object-oriented analysis and design language from the Object Management Group (OMG). Many design methodologies for describing object-oriented systems were developed in the late 1980s.  and TTCN (Tree and Tabular Combined Notation) A programming language endorsed by ISO that is used to write test suites for telecommunications systems. TTCN is used for "black box testing," which means that all interaction to the system is via messages, rather than by a ). TAU's unique visual development environment and industry-leading functionality simplifies, automates and accelerates the production of real-time and other software. Industry analyst firm Gartner stated in its August 2003 report "The OOA&D Market: 2004 Vendor Update Details" that Telelogic's TAU Generation2 "is the co-market leader ... for (Object Oriented Analysis and Design) modeling of real-time applications."

Named the most advanced change and configuration management system on the market by Yphise in its 2002 industry report "Application Change Management Software," and listed as the highest-rated configuration management tool in Ovum's May 2003 report, "Ovum Evaluates: Configuration Management," this project tool tracks changes and ensures configuration integrity during a software product's lifecycle, enabling parallel and distributed teams to improve productivity and quality.

Founded in 1983, Telelogic is the leading global provider of solutions for advanced systems and software development. The company's integrated best-in-class software tools, supported by professional services, enable companies to automate their entire development lifecycle, resulting in improved quality and predictability with reduced time-to-market and overall costs. To ensure interoperability with third-party tools, Telelogic's products are built on an open architecture and standardized languages. As an industry leader and technology visionary, Telelogic is actively involved in shaping the future of advanced systems and software development by participating in industry organizations like ETSI (European Telecommunications Standards Institute, Sophia Antipolis technical park, Nice, France, www.etsi.org) A non-profit membership organization founded in 1988, dedicated to standardizing information and communication technologies (ICT) throughout Europe. , INCOSE INCOSE International Council On Systems Engineering , ITU-T See ITU.

ITU-T - International Telecommunications Union
, MOST, OMG (1) See Object Management Group.

(2) "Oh my God!" See digispeak.

OMG - Object Management Group
 and others.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Millin Publishing, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Publication:EDP Weekly's IT Monitor
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 13, 2003
Words:578
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