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Additionally, all of their products are sold exclusively online, except for Comic Life, which can also be purchased in a boxed edition from Freeverse. [3] The company originally focused on developing audio related software, [4] although they have since released many other genres of software. In early 2010, Pearson and Lang left plasq to start ...
ComicBase is a computer program for tracking comic book collections. It was created in 1992 [2] by Peter Bickford as an Apple Macintosh program. A Windows version was introduced in 1996. As of February 2015, it is on its nineteenth version (dubbed ComicBase 2017) and is available for computers running Microsoft Windows Windows 7, and
Microsoft Comic Chat (later Microsoft Chat) is a graphical IRC client created by Microsoft, first released with Internet Explorer 3.0 in 1996. Comic Chat was developed by Microsoft Researcher David Kurlander, with Microsoft Research's Virtual Worlds Group and later a group he managed in Microsoft's Internet Division.
Create with Garfield is a 1986 Educational video game based on Jim Davis' Garfield comic strip, developed by Ahead Designs and published by Development Learning Materials. It was released for Apple II, Commodore 64, and MS-DOS.
Storybook Weaver is a 1990 educational game originally released on floppy disk for the Apple IIGS, aimed at children aged 6–12.An updated version, Storybook Weaver Deluxe, was released for Windows and Mac computers and featured much more content than the original.
A comic book archive or comic book reader file (also called sequential image file) is a type of archive file for the purpose of sequential viewing of images, commonly for comic books. The idea was made popular by the CDisplay sequential image viewer; [ 1 ] since then, many viewers for different platforms have been created.
A minicomic is a creator-published comic book, often photocopied and stapled or with a handmade binding. In the United Kingdom and Europe the term small press comic is equivalent with minicomic, reserved for those publications measuring A6 (105 mm × 148 mm) or less.
The Simpsons Cartoon Studio was released for PC and Mac computers in the middle of 1996. [1] It was developed by Big Top Productions and published by Fox Interactive, [8] and uses an improved version of the interface from Felix the Cat's Cartoon Toolbox that was developed by Big Top Productions. [9]