Wednesday, February 13th, 2008
If you looked at FormAssembly.com recently but decided that using a third-party service to manage your web forms wasn’t the right solution for you, we have some good news. FormAssembly On-Site is now available.
The On-Site edition offers the same great features enjoyed by thousands of our online users, but you can run it on your own server and keep your data safe and private.
FormAssembly On-Site is a reliable and secure solution designed to work on the most widely available configurations: Windows or Unix, IIS or Apache, and with any of the major database vendors. The support for such a wide range of technologies is made possible by the great open-source framework FormAssembly is built upon.
You can learn more about FormAssembly On-Site at http://onsite.formassembly.com
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Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007
Still adjusting stuff here and there, but overall it’s going smoothly… quite a relief!
Posted in Web Development, The Form Assembly | 2 Comments »
Monday, September 10th, 2007
FormAssembly.com started two years ago as a free form building tool and a repository for an open-source javascript library for web forms. It has since evolved into a commercial web application with thousands of customers using it to process their web forms and collect data. Yet, many aspects of the site still bore the mark of its early days and it became soon apparent that the whole application needed an overhaul.
After months of work, the new FormAssembly.com is nearing completion.
This new version is a complete re-write, and since it is hosted on a completely separate platform, we are looking forward to a very smooth transition, with the two versions running concurrently for as long as necessary.
The feedback from the early beta-testers is pretty good. There are also plenty of new (and long requested) features, so I’m confident that our users will be happy with the new version.
I will also look at the traffic and conversion numbers attentively anxiously. In theory, the new site should perform much better, but sometimes what sells is really not what you think, so it will be interesting to compare the numbers. I’ll try to post my findings here.
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