We’re Engage

Your partner in turning your vision into technical excellence.

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For over 25 years, we’ve combined our technical expertise with a partnership-focused approach𑁋delivering results that truly speak for themselves.

What truly sets us apart is how we engage with our partners. We take the time to understand what matters most to them, which is why every approach we take is uniquely tailored to their specific solution.

Discovery & Strategy

We kick off every project by working closely with you and your team in a discovery meeting to understand your vision and needs. Depending on the complexity and scale of our proposed solution, we’ll put together a team that includes project managers, designers, developers, or analysts, all tailored to your specific project. We’ll then present those custom solutions, discuss timelines, and clarify data requirements to make sure everyone is aligned from the start.

User Experience Design

Our design process is rooted in understanding your users and their behaviors. We gather user insights through research, interviews, and questionnaires which inform our design decisions. By focusing on user-centered and intentional designs, we create experiences that resonate with your audience.

Software Development

Our team works closely with you to create a solution that is both scalable and cost-effective. We keep the lines of communication open to ensure we're getting quick feedback from you at every stage. This allows us to continuously improve the solution and guarantee that we deliver the best possible results.

Continuous Optimization

As your partner, we view your solution as a long-term asset that we've designed to evolve alongside your growing needs. Projects typically unfold in multiple phases with each phase designed to optimize performance and ensure lasting success. Your dedicated team will equip you with actionable insights and best practices to keep you informed and supported with regular updates and performance improvements.

“Unlike large software companies where you’re just a number, Engage is a partner that listens, communicates, and adapts to our needs—not just for development, but for the years to come. That’s exactly what we were looking for, and we found it in Engage.”

Matt Wells, Vice President Mid-west Truckers Association Inc

Latest News

Using ASP.NET AJAX UpdatePanels in DotNetNuke

Since the 1.0 release of ASP.NET AJAX Extensions, we've been making use of the new functionality offered us through AJAX, both from the core extensions and through the AjaxControlToolkit.  However, we've run into a road block a number of times when we're tried to use the new UpdatePanel control to add some AJAX responsiveness into our web pages.  In short, we hadn't ever gotten it to work.

Recently, some clients were pressing us for some functionality that required UpdatePanels (or diving much deeper than we liked into JavaScript), so after another failed attempt at partial rendering, I handed the project over to a colleague to see if he might have any better luck.  Fortunately, he was able to search out the information we needed.  I had seen Jon Henning's blog post about integrating UpdatePanels into DNN, but it was rather old, so I didn't pay a whole lot of attention to it.  As soon as Chris showed me his solution, I realized that I had been staring at it the whole time.  The DotNetNuke web.config defaults the mode attribute on the xhtmlConformance node to "Legacy," which isn't compatible with UpdatePanels.  It needs to be set to "Transitional."

One other symptom of this was that, not only would the UpdatePanel not do it's automagic AJAXifying, it didn't set itself up in the javascript, either.  So, code like what I found at http://smarx.com/posts/why-the-updateprogress-wont-display.aspx, which is supposed to allow you to tie into a control's postback to perform some action, wasn't working.  There was no PageRequestManager being created, so even basic JavaScript wasn't working.

So, if your UpdatePanels don't update without a full postback, or your JavaScript doesn't initialize the PageRequestManager or other expected objects, check your web.config's xhtmlConformance.  Scott Guthrie also addresses this in one of his blog posts.

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