A leading developer of royalty-free .NET telephony application software, Inventive Labs Corporation, officially announced today the release of its new 'Voice Elements' application development toolkit. Voice Elements, designed for companies that need to provide telephony-based products or services, breaks the chain of expensive, proprietary development, and offers companies the opportunity to build voice solutions using languages such as C# and VB.NET.
President and CEO of Inventive Labs, Ron Tanner, says: "Voice Elements is designed to bring the power and control of telephony application development back in-house." He added: "We're giving telephony-focused companies a completely new world of development possibilities through tools and technologies they already know and understand."
Built on Microsoft's .NET framework, the Voice Elements Developers Kit includes pre-made voice application modules, sample code tutorials, and reporting features such as call monitoring and logging. Director of Sales and Marketing for Inventive Labs, Gregg Williamson, declared: "The key to any good toolkit is providing everything the developer needs to get up and running quickly." He added: "Voice Elements not only provides developers with a familiar environment in .NET, it gives them intuitive and ready-made building blocks to create from." Voice Elements provides an easy learning curve, faster application development, and ultimately faster product development.
CEO of Voice4Net, Rick McFarland, commented:
"I'm very excited to see that, with Voice Elements, telephony application development has finally caught up with the rest of the application development world." He continues: "This is going to provide a wake-up call to the voice solution companies that continue to insist on custom, proprietary technology."
Inventive Labs, in keeping with its 'total solutions' approach, also offers application development, hosting, and support resources for customers who may lack the necessary internal resources. "We've always been a solutions-focused company," says Tanner, "even with a great product like Voice Elements, we recognize that it solves just one part of the problem."