Open Source

Open source is a collaborative development model, primarily for software, where the source code—the underlying instructions for a program—is made publicly available under a license that grants anyone the rights to use, study, change, and distribute it for any purpose. Key principles include transparency, peer production, and a decentralized development approach, allowing for collective improvement of products like software, designs, and documents. Examples of open source software include the Linux operating system, and its impact is expanding to other areas beyond just technology.

Why do we use open source

At Inabox Systems Nova we use Open Source software because its free, shareable and it can be modified with out legal problems.

At Inabox Systems Nova were determined to help our customers with Open Source software to solve their necessities with easy to use, and free software.

Native Software

Native software is built to be executed directly by processors that implement a compatible instruction set. A program that runs natively on one platform is runnable on another platform via an emulator if an emulator is available and, generally, with significant runtime speed degradation. For example, games for a Game Boy (typically distributed as a cartridge), generally run natively on a Game Boy which is relatively incompatible with other computer platforms. To run such a game on another processor, software that emulates the Game Boy hardware is required.

Web Application Software

A web application software is a software programme which is stored on the Server and accessed via a web browser (Chrome, Firefox, IE, Edge, Safari, etc.). A more technical definition – ‘A software programme which is developed using web technologies (HTML, CSS, JS, etc.)