![]() |
|
Type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Software |
Founded | 2002 |
Headquarters | Sydney, Australia |
Key people | Mike Cannon-Brookes Scott Farquhar |
Products | JIRA Confluence Crowd Bamboo Bitbucket FishEye Clover Crucible JIRA Studio Bonfire Team Calendars |
Employees | 400[1] |
Website | atlassian.com |
Atlassian (/ˈætlæsiʌn/) is a software company based in Sydney, Australia which makes business enterprise software, targeted at software developers. On 1 September 2010, the World Economic Forum announced the company as a Technology Pioneer for 2011.
Contents |
Products
The Atlassian products Crucible, FishEye, Bamboo, Clover, and JIRA Studio are targeted at programmers working with a code base. Atlassian also produces tools such as its popular wiki Confluence,[2] and bug and issue tracker JIRA that are targeted more generally.[3] Atlassian is particularly well known for focusing on serving Agile software development, as well as practicing Agile itself.[4]
Atlassian has been described as an enterprise social software vendor.[5] Atlassian products are not open source for the most part, but are sold under a license which permits customers to view and modify code so long as they don't redistribute or resell it.[6]
On 29 September 2010, Atlassian bought Bitbucket, a web-based hosting service for projects that use both the Mercurial and the Git revision control system.[7][8]
On 6 October 2011, Atlassian acquired SourceTree, a Git and Mercurial distributed version control system client for Mac. [9]
Company
Atlassian was founded in Sydney in 2002 by Mike Cannon-Brookes and Scott Farquhar, who met while studying at the University of New South Wales.[10] The company made $59 million in revenue in 2011,[1] is on a $100 million run rate for the current fiscal year[11] and has 26,000 customers globally.[12] It now also has offices in San Francisco, Amsterdam and Tokyo.
The company was self-funded for many years, starting with a $10,000 credit card taken out by the founders, but in July 2010 it raised its first institutional funding: $60 million in venture capital from Accel Partners.[13] On June 24, 2011, Atlassian announced its first big investment in another company: Cloud9, a SaaS-based IDE platform.[14]
See also
References
- ^ a b "Our Company". Atlassian. http://www.atlassian.com/company/about/.
- ^ Thoeny, Peter; Dan Woods (2007). Wikis for Dummies. ISBN 9780470043998.
- ^ Sharwood, Simon (5 December 2006). "Love grows in collaboration". Sydney Morning Herald. http://www.smh.com.au/news/biztech/love-grows-in-collaboration/2006/12/04/1165080883615.html.
- ^ Abrahamsson, Pekka; Michele Marchesi, Frank Maurer (2009). Agile Processes in Software Engineering and Extreme Programming. Springer. ISBN 9783642018527.
- ^ Krill, Paul. "Social networking touted for software development". InfoWorld. http://www.infoworld.com/d/developer-world/social-networking-touted-software-development-726.
- ^ Asay, Matt. "The riddle that is Atlassian". CNET. http://news.cnet.com/8301-13505_3-9760614-16.html.
- ^ http://blog.bitbucket.org/2010/09/29/bitbucket-joins-atlassian/
- ^ http://blog.bitbucket.org/2011/10/03/bitbucket-now-rocks-git/
- ^ http://blogs.atlassian.com/2011/10/press_release_atlassian_acquires_sourcetree_adds_git_support_to_bitbucket_code_hosting/
- ^ Moses, Asher (15 July 2010). "From Uni dropouts to software magnates". The Sydney Morning Herald. http://www.smh.com.au/small-business/entrepreneur/from-uni-dropouts-to-software-magnates-20100715-10bsm.html.
- ^ http://blogs.atlassian.com/news/2011/08/press_release_atlassian_caps_massive_revenue_growth_with_key.html
- ^ http://blogs.atlassian.com/news/2011/09/atlassian_confluence_4_sets_the_standard_for_content_collabo.html
- ^ Tam, Pui-Wing (14 July 2010). "Accel Invests $60 Million in Atlassian". Digits (Wall Street Journal). http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2010/07/14/accel-invests-60-million-in-atlassian/.
- ^ http://blogs.atlassian.com/news/2011/06/atlassian_invests_in_cloud9_ide.html