We do a number of different things.
We can organize data, summarize it, and report on it. Click here for more information.
We can do statistical analysis of the data after we have organized it. Click here for more information.
We can put together a computer program, or a system of computer programs, to solve a special need. Click here for more information.
We can reverse-engineer an executable computer program to analyze exactly what it is doing. Click here for more information.
A short resumé is available. If you would like to read it, click here.
There is a rather long curriculum vitae available. If you
would
like to read it, click here.
An informal biographical sketch can be found as a .pdf file on the
British Computer
Society website here.
Frequently, data is available in unusual, inconsistant, formats, or is embedded in garbage. We have managed to squeeze real information out of what, at first impression, appeared to be utterly intractable data. Sometimes this involved manual entry, other times it was possible to write clever programs to weed through the dross to mine the ore. Once the data has been converted to a rational form, we have correlated data from incompatible sources, generated reports, added ZIP codes, validated references, and done other kinds of things to attempt to assure that the data is as was represented. Click here to return to top of page.
We have been of some help to some attorneys in identifying statistical indications of discrimination for their use in lawsuits. If this, or some other type of statistical analysis, interests you, we would be happy to provide references. Click here to return to top of page.
We wrote our first computer program in 1951, and have been programming professionally since 1957. We've written a number of different kinds of programs, from astrological to zoological, in a number of different computer environments. If you need something, and you can't find it, or anything like it, on a shelf somewhere, perhaps we can develop it for you. Click here to return to top of page.
We can take a program in ROM and, knowing the
chip on which it will run, reverse-engineer it so that we can
understand
exactly what it does. This has been useful for some patent
problems.
We have written a decompiler for the intermediate languge generated by
some compilers, to recover the source code to allow us to make
corrections
and improvements, when the original source code was unavailable. Click
here to return to top of page.
To contact us, please e-mail
us at pzi.syscon@ingerman.org
Return to www.ingerman.org
home page
"Cum tantum malleum habes, totus mundus pisci cum ocreis similis apparet."