Web sites Application development Software design Content management HTML CSS User interface design Web servers Java PHP Social media LinkedIn Security Database design Perl Javascript
Tanzarine Technology
Tanzarine Technology has provided intranet and Internet technical expertise across a wide range of business sectors for over 20 years.
From time to time Tanzarine Technology produces technical discussion articles for various reasons, and a selection of these are archived here. Note that many are historical and whilst every effort has been made to keep them up to date, some details may now be incorrect.
16/03/2020: Tanzarine Technology has completed a technical refresh of the vacancy management system used by City of London recruitment specialists CP Recruitment Services Ltd. The system was created using the CakePHP framework and the MySQL database. In addition, the company's web site has been powered by Tanzarine Technology's Content Management Services (CMS) for many years.
03/04/2012: Tanzarine director Neil Pellinacci provides informed comments for the media on a variety of topics, and has had work published in the IT press and also appeared on a BBC News programme about Open Source software. A summary appears here.
01/03/2006: Each month, ITadviser includes a feature where IT professionals describe their top web sites. Tanzarine director Neil Pellinacci wrote the feature for the January/February 2006 edition of the magazine.
13/08/2005: In the early days of the web, web pages were uploaded to servers by support staff with technical knowledge, leaving the business users who actually authored the content in the first place outside the technical life cycle. Content Management puts the business users directly in control of their content on their web sites.
01/06/2005: Tanzarine Technology has just completed a major development and consultancy project for Methods Consulting Ltd on its flagship B2G project.
27/3/2004: It's now over two decades since the computing world entered the domestic market, with a plethora of machines costing a few hundred pounds or less. Tanzarine director Neil Pellinacci looks back at the production of a typical games book, on the twentieth anniversary of its publication.