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Summation of a Review of a Year in Review

Some find year-in-review blogs to be, as the title of this post suggests, a bit superfluous, but the argument for them is simple: They allow a company to show that its momentum hasn’t faltered while providing perspective on where it is headed. So, despite the eyes that roll whenever the yearly wrap-up appears on the blog calendar, it is an effective form, nonetheless.

For the sake of the argument for year-in-review blogs, here, in short form, is how Syncfusion spent 2015.

Developing New Products and Suites

We introduced control suites for Android and iOS at the end of 2014, but due to the expansion and maturation of those suites in 2015, they should be mentioned in this list. Each now contains 14 distinct controls, and more are added every quarter.

We released our suite of XamarinForms, Xamarin.iOS, and Xamarin.Android controls in February, happily starting a relationship with Xamarin—a company that provides a platform for sharing a C# code base across native Windows, iOS, and Android apps.

Syncfusion Report Server was introduced, which is used to manage, organize, and share RDL reports online.

Syncfusion Dashboard Platform debuted—our solution for creating, managing, and sharing interactive business dashboards.

We also launched a .NET library called Essential Presentation, which reads, writes, and modifies PowerPoint files without needing Microsoft Office to be installed.

At the time of our Volume 2 release, we added the Syncfusion JavaScript Playground, an online environment that allows you to preview iOS, Android, and Windows Phone components built with Essential Studio for JavaScript.

Our Volume 3 release also added a new dimension to our JavaScript offering by introducing an interactive JavaScript spreadsheet control.

Developing New Features for Existing Products and Controls

With every release in 2015, we added features to existing components and improved the performance of all our existing products—including older platforms such as Windows Forms.

Even older platforms exclusive to Syncfusion were not overlooked, such as Orubase, our solution for developing cross-platform, hybrid applications, which received two important extensions:

  • The Orubase Developer Application—allowing developers to load, view, and test hybrid HTLM5 and JavaScript apps developed with the Orubase framework.
  • Orubase Simulator—providing a preview of how an app would appear on iOS, Android, or Windows Phone.

Developing Developer Resources

During January of 2015, in what could be termed our most impactful move, we introduced the Syncfusion Community License, giving individual developers and small businesses free access to all our controls. Essentially, this made our products a community resource for anyone wanting to experiment with or learn Syncfusion controls.

We increased our Succinctly series library to more than 80 titles of free e-books, and our Technology Portal itself was redesigned to make searching for titles easier.

Planning Events, Receiving Rewards, Eating Cake

We hosted Xamarin DevDays in November, celebrated Ada Lovelace Day with members from the local branch of Girl Develop It (whom we featured in blogs), and received two notable rewards: Daniel Jebaraj, our vice president was awarded the Full Steam Ahead Award from TechWire and for the tenth consecutive year Syncfusion made the SD Times 100 List.

And there was cake—mostly cupcakes, actually—which we ate unabashedly because in 2015 we added more staff, developed more products, and expanded our vision for what’s possible. The next challenge will be to construct a 2016 that can top the 2015 we had.

Meet the Author

Tres Watkins

Tres Watkins oversees Syncfusion's content development and editorial team to deliver an accessible, uncomplicated reader experience. He has worked in publishing for 15 years, where he honed his craft of communicating essential information to target audiences. He holds a bachelor's degree in communications from Appalachian State University