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3T is a systems integration and professional services firm committed to the development of business-critical systems and applications in the Internet and client/server environments which are:
- Business-driven (Vs. technology-demanded)
- Open (Vs. proprietary)
- Fully flexible for current and future growth (Vs. vendor dependent)
From its corporate headquarters in Tenafly, NJ, with offices in San Francisco, CA, Brattleboro, VT and Hong Kong. 3T provides a full range of services for all types of computing hardware, software, networking, application development, quality assurance (QA), project management (PM), and consulting services in the Internet and client/server environments.
 
While our primary areas of geographic coverage are the northeast and the west coast, we have also been involved in projects in the southeast and western regions of the United States. 3T is a joint venture of RAM/ROM International, Inc. (founded in 1983) and Timothee I/S Services. 3T has also been joined by a number of former IBM Systems Integration employees with experience in managing and integrating hardware and software from dissimilar vendors.
Our objective is to provide our clients the ability to maintain a competitive advantage by optimally inter-connecting (via local and wide area networks) to mission critical data across their geography. We satisfy that objective by developing and delivering customized systems grounded in open architecture and industry standards.
3T has a close working relationship with the Cambridge Technology Group and its CEO, Prof. John J. Donovan who is also an adjunct professor at MIT. Dr. Donovan helped 'coin' the term client/server. He has lectured extensively on the technology and its organizational impact since its inception by the Open Software Foundation.
It is our goal to design and install truly open computing environments that would employ a standard set of interfaces for internet access, programming, communication, networking, system management, and user "look and feel" or graphical user interfaces (GUI), so software applications can become uncoupled from the platforms on which they run.
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