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eYucca Delivers Fully Customizable Applications for the Designer
New personal Application Services Provider launches on the net.
The team from Emeriti New Media Studios (www.emeriti.com) has just launched their latest venture: eYucca.com, an application services provider aimed at the web designer. After months of developing and testing, eYucca has been successfully brought online and is now poised to serve the web with fully customizable, seamlessly integrated web applications aimed at the selective, high-end of the market among designers and new media firms.
The applications can be bought via the website, and thanks to instant account activation, subscribers can begin to work with their applications at once. "The setup is made extremely simple - you just need to copy a few lines of HTML code into your website. The code is even generated for you depending on the input you specify", states Zach Vincent, who is in charge of Technical Development at eYucca.com. Mark Langeneck developed the front-end and website design closely together with Vincent. "We wanted to give the user full control over the applications. Everybody can buy and set them up within minutes", adds Langeneck and continues: "We know that the designer values the high level of customization he or she gets with every eYucca application - so do their clients."
As part of the eYucca strategy to be involved with the design community, a 'supported by eYucca' plan is offered. "We are always looking for strategic website and community partners that are interested in our sponsorship program", explains Vincent.
A goal from the start has been the full customization of the remotely hosted applications. Hence, no application has a logo, banner, or other kind of advertising on it. "Users can fully integrate them in their clients sites without having to worry about specific server issues or writing all the code themselves", says Vincent. "We believe that the customer and user demands high quality today, and we are ready to deliver exactly this quality to todays designers and new media firms", Langeneck adds.
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