Smallrock is a family of enterprises that focus on IT services, software development, and website design. Founded in 1990, long before the World-Wide-Web brought public attention to the Internet, Smallrock traces its roots back a decade earlier to when the network was just being established. Participating in the ARPAnet rollout in 1983 and 1984 the software engineers who launched this company brought the network to public universities via the Unix operating system and helped create the Internet. So, leverage the talent pool with the longest and best experience in state-of-the-art software engineering, security, and networking.
The focus of Smallrock is to build better software. We provide mentoring, coaching, and instruction in all aspects of software engineering, including design principles and patterns, testing, and Agile methodologies.
New Media FX specializes in designing websites and web applications, software that provides a fully function interface and application to the website visitors. These are the type of applications that you find when you visit the online presence of banks, airlines, and other entities that want to provide service customers over the Internet.
South Florida Web Hosting partners with GoDaddy to provide domain registration, website and application hosting, site security, TLS ecnryption certificates, backups, email and SEO marketing, and email services. Managed across global data centers this business-class hosting the standard for the Gold and Treasure Coasts and beyond!
Next Step IT Training delivers the best course material available for software engineering, design principles and patterns, programming frameworks and languages, secure programming, and Agile methodologies. Choose from our catalog of existing courses or ask us to design a custom course, boot camp, or program to fit your needs!
Joel Mussman leads the team of software architects at Smallrock and New Media FX, and as many of our developers do he splits his time between consulting on projects, mentoring, coaching, and training. He started out as a Cobol and Basic programmer and became a software engineer specializing in Fortran and C before moving on to become a strong advocate of applying object-oriented design principles for building robust applications with languages like C++, Java, C#, and JavaScript. Joel keeps a blog about software development at http://askjoelit.com. He claims that he forgets how he figured things out and that the blog is simply his personal catalog of solutions that he can refer back to, but from looking at the stats we believe that many more developers visit it than he wants to admit!