Insalgo
visit site- $5,000+
- 10 - 49 employees
- Gdańsk, Poland
Insalgo is a software development company. Based in Gdansk, Poland, their team of under 10 employees was founded in 2013. They focus primarily in mobile app development, with AR/VR development and app management and support projects also falling under their scope.
Client Insights
Industry Expertise
This provider has not added their industry expertise.
Client Size Distribution
This provider has not added their client sizes.
Common Project Size
$10K-$49K 2 projects
<$10K 1 project
$200K-$999K 1 project
Clients
- Aidlab
Highlights from Recent Projects
Insalgo collaborated with a software development house based in Poland to create a mobile application for a startup client. The company did not have much experience in mobile application development, and thus, turned to Insalgo for assistance. Insalgo allocated a full-time iOS Swift developer for the project and also integrated Google Maps and Firebase into the application. The project started in March 2016 and was completed in August of the same year, at a cost of approximately €15,000 or US $16,811.
In another project, Insalgo worked with a digital image processing firm to develop an app similar to Snapchat. The firm required developers who could build the app with real-time effects for videos. Insalgo's team, consisting of four developers, used standard Objective-C and the Cocoa OpenGL 2.0 Shader Library for the iOS app development. The project began in 2013 and was completed after around a year, with approximately 75% of the app finished. The cost of the project was around $120,000.
Insalgo was hired by The Knights of Unity, a game development company specializing in virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) gaming. The company needed additional capacity to handle incoming projects, and Insalgo provided developers who met their quality standards. Insalgo worked on several projects including VR, native Android and iOS, and Unity development. They helped build four or five apps using technologies like Samsung Gear, HTC VIVE, and C#. The project began in early 2017 and ended after about four months, costing around $30,000.