About us
More information about the Hyperflux CMS team
Learn more about the project, its creators, and the team
We are a team - no, to tell the truth, up until the moment this article was last edited, I am just one person - passionate about programming and technology, who decided to create HyperFluxCMS to fill some needs and gaps that apparently were not covered by popular similar systems on the market.
HyperFluxCMS was created without profit in mind, at least not directly and immediately. I hope that profit comes, one way or another, whether through partnerships, through donations and collaboration, through clients interested in hiring Premium Support, perhaps by attracting some forward-thinking investor, or by promoting our services and capabilities. But that was not the main reason.
See more at History and at Motivations.
As I am the main shareholder of a small technology services company, SCI (Sirius Creative I.T) or Sirius Brasil, I placed it as a co-creator of the system, so that there is a legal entity behind it, for possible partnerships, investments, etc.
SCI is a small technology development company founded just over 10 years ago. It recently underwent a corporate restructuring.
One of SCI's areas of expertise is software development. And it has the capacity to develop software on a wide range of platforms:
SCI also designs electronic circuits; including IoT (Internet of Things) devices.
SCI's services can range from conception to production.
We hope to expand our team and also count on community collaborators. At the moment, the authors/developers/collaborators involved in the project are:
Dirceu Hartmann is a senior full-stack developer.
Currently programs in Pascal/Delphi, Java, Javascript, C, C++, and C# and some Assembly variations. At the beginning of his career, he programmed in various dialects of Basic and even Clipper. He has also stepped into the territory of Logo, Lisp, Swift, Dart, Python, and a few others.
He primarily develops Desktop apps for Windows, bare-metal embedded systems for devices with AVR, ARM, and RISC-V microcontrollers, and applications for Android, but also develops for Linux, Back-end applications, Arduino, POS terminals for card reading, and even JavaCard. Occasionally, he may develop for MacOS or iOS.
Self-taught, he started programming at age 12, on an old 8-bit MSX computer, with which he still has a relationship of love, respect, and nostalgia.
He started learning electronics at 13, encouraged by masters such as Newton C. Braga (Saber Eletrônica, Eletrônica Total, and other magazines) and the late Beda Marques (may God rest his soul), from the magazines Be-a-bá da Eletrônica, Divirta-se com a Eletrônica, ABC da Eletrônica, and Aprendendo e Praticando Eletrônica.
He entered the Computer Science course at the State University of Londrina at age 17, graduating in 1997.
Still in 1997, even before graduating, he was one of the founders of CQ Tecnologia, or ComQuest Tecnologia, where he always worked focused on software development, hardware, and embedded software.
At 18, he was introduced to the world of microcontrollers (at the time, Microchip PIC) and embedded programming. He hasn't stopped since, and to this day, he is fascinated by discovering new, more powerful, more efficient microcontrollers with more built-in resources.
He also learned to design 3D parts and artifacts using CAD software, and to design parts cut by Laser cutting machines.
He is practically the Don Ramón (from the TV Show "El Chavo") of Technology. He is a painter, carpenter, milkman, boxer, bullfighter, electrician, and churros seller.
At ComQuest, he is co-author of two patent applications for electronic equipment:
Also at ComQuest, he developed STAR - a telemetry and remote control system for cell phone repeaters, which was used by all major cell phone operators in Brazil. In the project, he developed both the equipment and the monitoring software.
He was awarded in two categories - Serious Games and Applications - in the INOVApps 2014 contest promoted by the Ministry of Communications.
He is still a partner at ComQuest, but also decided to venture into other grounds.
After a restructuring, he took over SCI Brasil Tecnologia.
He currently provides services to Paytech Solutions Spa, from Chile.
He is the author and main developer of Uno - a self-service "totem" or "ATM" application for gas stations, initially used by Petrobras in Chile, and currently the system is used by Aramco, one of the largest oil companies in the world.
He also developed the card reading system that runs on card machines of the Petrobras Flota system (now also used by Aramco in Chile), which is part of an intricate integration network between various commercial partners for retail fuel sales, between POS (card machines), the network's own card, the billing system, portal, and fuel pumps. See Aramco Fleet.
He is finalizing a small handful of electronic and computer equipment that should be launched in 2026 by SCI, such as a measurement, control, and dispatch system for anti-pollutant additives for diesel vehicles (such as ARLA-32).