Erlang Training and Consulting Ltd. is your one stop shop
for all your Erlang needs. We offer Erlang/OTP training at
all levels, experienced Erlang contractors, consulting
services, in-house systems development and Erlang based
recruitment services. Our network of certified consultants
is one of the most experienced as they have been using
Erlang/OTP since its early days. With offices in the UK and
Sweden and clients on five continents, we are available for
short and long term jobs world-wide. Erlang Training and Consulting Ltd. is a niche company specialising in
the open source language Erlang and its middleware OTP. It was founded
soon after Erlang was released as open source in 1999, with an aim to
fill a vacum similar to that existing prior to companies such as SUSE
and Redhat came in to support Linux. Our areas of operation include
Training, Consulting, Contracting, Recruitment and System
Development. We will soon provide commercial support licenses for the
open source release, acting as first and second line support on behalf
of Ericsson. Our main office is in central London, with a Swedish satellite office in
Uppsala (a short train ride north of Stockholm). From these locations,
we serve our clients who are spread on five continents. Our clients are
universities, major multinational corporations, as well as
small and medium sized companies. It is a good match for Erlang
Training and Consulting's staff, who represent seven nationalities and
have no fear of flying. All of us are active in the Erlang community, most of us having done our
thesis projects on some aspect of Erlang. We often present at
Conferences and Workshops, sit on their Organisational Committees,
manage Erlang related Web Sites, Mailing Lists, Blogs and Open Source
projects. Not to mention our presence in the academic sector, with
ongoing research and thesis projects in cooperation with universities
worldwide. At the end of the day, what brings us together is a passion for
what we do, namely a good challenge involving distributed, massively
concurrent soft real time systems... All done in Erlang. |