SoftSol Technologies, Inc., a leading provider of enterprise software and technology modernization solutions, announced today that it is building a Microsoft-based end-to-end Traffic Case Management System (TCMS) for a large northern California county.
Traffic citations had previously been managed by a legacy system, but the county of over 1.5 million people has long outgrown the capabilities of this aging technology. SoftSol has designed a new solution that covers all functionality of the legacy system as well as the county’s expanded needs.
The new system meets typical traffic case management needs like citation processing, fiscal transaction management, court calendar management, and court room matters. Additionally, it provides appropriate mandated forms, notices and extensive reporting capabilities. The system also interfaces with Autocite, Photo Red Light, DMV, AWS, Central Collections, Web –pay, and other centralized systems.
SoftSol is building this integrated case management system on the state-of-the-art Microsoft .NET platform using Visual Studio 2010 (.NET Framework 4.0), ASP.NET (and C# programming language), Rich Internet Application module with Silverlight 3.0, IIS 7.0, SQL Server 2008, and Internet Explorer 8.0.
"We are thrilled that SoftSol has chosen the Microsoft platform for this innovative solution," said Tom O’Neil, Government Partner Account Manager at Microsoft Corporation. "SoftSol’s knowledge and expertise in providing world class technology modernizations solutions to government customers aligns effectively with the advanced capabilities of the .Net Framework." "We at SoftSol are very excited about joining hands with Microsoft to help our customers move off of legacy platforms to the more robust and maintainable .NET Framework technology,” said Srini Madala, President & CEO of SoftSol. “Since many California counties are looking to implement systems similar to TCMS, we needed a platform that allowed for maximum flexibility. Our Microsoft partnership will greatly enhance our joint ability to extend these cutting-edge features to smaller California counties with limited budgets.”
