Schub
visit site- $1,000+
- 10 - 49 employees
- Argentina
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
$50K-$199K 1 project
$200K-$999K 1 project
$1,000,000-$9,999,999 1 project
Clients
- Genesys
Highlights from Recent Projects
Flugel.it provided cloud consulting services for Wimo, a shipping software company, setting up their cloud-based infrastructure on AWS. As the company had no internal resources to handle this, Flugel.it was brought in to set up the database and log-in tools using Elastic and Kibana. They also used Grafana to build dashboards for monitoring the performance of the infrastructure databases. As Wimo evolved, they switched everything to Kubernetes to orchestrate different aspects of the infrastructure. The engagement, which started in January 2019, ended in December 2020 after Wimo began doing more work internally. Wimo invested over $50,000 in this project.
In another project, Flugel.it provided DevOps support for ConfigureID, an online product customization, and personalization platform. The company had a functional system but needed to reduce inefficiencies. Flugel.it implemented CircleCI and introduced Helm Charts into their Kubernetes configuration, making it more efficient and less error-prone. They also assisted in migrating between different cloud platforms and from New Relic to Prometheus. More recently, they helped ConfigureID introduce their own infrastructure. The ongoing engagement, which started in January 2019, has cost ConfigureID over $100,000.
Flugel.it also worked with an enterprise software service provider for contact centers. They were brought in to automate the deployment of the company's software. The team at Flugel.it remotely assisted in deploying the software, starting with product configuration and then using Chef Infra Server to bootstrap the application servers, roll out the software, and report the results back to the consultant. The project, which ran from July 2015 to March 2020, cost the software service provider between $1,000,000 and $5,000,000.