We have the experience and knowledge to choose the right tools.
End Point has a long history with Perl. In fact, our first dynamic websites were written in Perl around 1997. We moved beyond CGI scripts to the Interchange application server to custom MVC frameworks and then POE, Catalyst, and Dancer. We still support many Perl applications and are experienced migrating to newer Perl and CPAN modules versions and troubleshooting performance problems.
Our developers also know the ins and outs of ecommerce with Perl and can advise you on usability, promotions, merchandising, marketing, SEO, search, inventory management, fulfillment, and much more.
With some other ecommerce packages, you can only pick from available features and take what you get. But a business needs to stand apart from the competition. With Interchange, we have customized and enhanced every aspect of many stores. Our consultants work closely with you to design cost-effective custom solutions that deliver real value.
Your business is more than a website. Chances are you have internal systems for your inventory, fulfillment, accounting, or customer service. End Point’s developers can work with you to harmoniously integrate Interchange with your existing systems and third-party services to make your business run more smoothly.
Over the years End Point engineers have fine-tuned Interchange and other Perl codebases for maximum stability and performance. We make code work well for small sites on a single cloud instance, mid-sized sites on multiple nodes or dedicated servers, and large sites on dozens of load-balanced application servers backed by replicated databases. Our team can help you grow your site as fast as you need, handling millions of products and hundreds of thousands of transactions on a daily basis. With End Point, your business won’t outgrow your website.
Kürşat Kutlu Aydemir · August 10, 2020
Elizabeth Garrett Christensen · January 13, 2020
Elizabeth Garrett Christensen · August 28, 2019
Phin Jensen · January 23, 2018
Greg Hanson · August 28, 2017
Greg Sabino Mullane · July 21, 2017