Migration Proposal
This is very technical, so bear with me. It will all make sense in the end.
Our company's private intra- and interoffice communications framework since our IPO in 2009 has been built on a protocol called Heuristic Operational Lightweight Encryption. The framework we use to encode and decode content into this protocol was initially developed by company co-founder and current CTO Fredwick Smytheton. Mr. Smytheton's designs focused foremost on flexibility and broad applicability, and he dubbed the framework The Advanced General Encoder.
The Advanced General Encoder has served us well, as has Heuristic Operational Lightweight Encryption. It has become increasingly clear that the bottleneck in our workflow is not one of technology, but of infrastructure.
When we contracted Aether Networking to provide our data transmission backbone in 2012, they had only just entered the North American market after a period of incredible success and rapid expansion across Europe. It seemed like we had formed a smart alliance on the eve of their new conquest. Of course, that's not quite the way it worked out. Aether Networking's United States branch has struggled, with frequent maintenance periods and outages.
The head start that Aether Networking's United States branch had with integrating Heuristic Operational Lightweight Encryption protocol support has long been irrelevant, and other infrastructure providers offer that integration with new, advanced APIs, and more reliable uptime.
In particular, the FTC's recent merger approval for Titania-Hermes Innovations and Garamond Hybrid Services makes them a particularly attractive option, and an infrastructure migration is a perfect opportunity to deploy Free Responsive Object Theory The Advanced General Encoder, the dev team's new open-source iteration on our stable but aging framework.
For all these reasons, I propose to the board that for our H.O.L.E. needs we migrate from A.N.U.S. to T.H.I./G.H.S., using F.R.O.T.T.A.G.E.