LuraTech
limited-liability company | |
Industry | electronic document processing |
Founded | 1995Berlin, Germany | in
Founder | Carsten Heiermann |
Headquarters | Willy-Brandt-Platz 1, Remscheid, Germany |
Key people |
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Products |
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Number of employees | ~25 |
Divisions |
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Website |
www |
LuraTech is a software company with offices in Remscheid, Berlin, London, and in the USA, which makes products for handling and conversion of digital documents. Its customers are primarily organizations involved in long-term document archiving and scan service providers. It is a member of the PDF Association.[1]
LuraTech was founded as a part of a joint project with the Technical University of Berlin intended to bring wavelet compression techniques to digital still images. LuraTech developed a segmentation technology to deal with scanned documents containing mixed raster content (MRC), resulting in the creation of LuraDocument LDF, a proprietary document format for the compression of scanned documents. Since then, LuraTech has developed several software development kits (SDKs) and computer applications for creating and handling PDF documents. LuraTech has also taken part in the development of the JPEG 2000 standard.[2][3]
In 2002, LuraTech created the PDF Compressor, applying the concepts of MRC layered document compression to PDF standards, especially PDF/A. This was the first workflow solution that LuraTech built on top of its software development kits.
In 2010, LuraTech launched DocYard, a software platform to create and centrally manage general document and data conversion processes.
At the 2013 CeBIT conference, LuraTech announced the release of its ZUGFeRD Extraction SDK,[4] a toolkit for ERP and online banking software developers, which facilitates processing of PDF invoices standardized under the Central User Guidelines for Electronic Billing in Germany (ZUGFeRD).
In 2015, LuraTech released LuraTech PDF Scanner iOS, a freely-available iPhone/iPad app for convenient creating and editing of highly compressed PDF documents.
References
- ↑ PDF Association LuraTech Europe GmbH
- ↑ R. Colin Johnson, JPEG2000 wavelet compression spec approved, Dec. 28, 1999, EETimes
- ↑ Ken Milburn, JPEG2000: the Killer Image File Format for Lossless Storage, Nov. 21, 2003, O'Reilly Web Development DevCenter
- ↑ Luratech Europe GmbH, LuraTech treibt ZUGFeRD voran, Jan 29, 2013, VOI.de (in German)
External links
- Interview with the CEO of LuraTech in December 2004
- LuraTech White Paper JPEG2000 - The Emerging Standard for the Millennium Overview : Next Generation Image Compression