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Shortly after FileMaker 4's release, Apple Computer formed Claris, a wholly owned subsidiary, to market software. Claris purchased Nashoba to round out its software suite. . By that point, Leading Edge and Nutshell had faded from the marketplace because of competition from other DOS- and later Windows-based database produc
Bento is a discontinued database application for Mac OS X made by the former FileMaker Inc., since renamed to Claris.Bento differed significantly from the company's flagship product, FileMaker Pro, in that it relied heavily on templates and integration with other applications.
2.0v3 – Some more new features and bug fixes added. This is the last US English version. It was quickly released after Apple pulled the plug on the Emailer project. (The project was cancelled along with all other non-FileMaker Claris products when Claris became FileMaker, Inc. It was certified the day before the company changed names.)
He and software developer Dennis Austin led the development of a program called Presenter, which they later renamed PowerPoint. [1] Also in 1984, Forethought acquired the rights to publish a Macintosh version of a DOS-based application called Nutshell. They named the Mac version FileMaker and it soon became enormously successful. [2]
WebSTAR was also part of Apple's Internet Server Solution, a package of internet server software and certain models of PowerMac machines. One popular use of WebSTAR was in combination with FileMaker to make simple database-driven online applications. The product traces its roots to the earlier MacHTTP, released as shareware by Chuck Shotton in ...
Wingz was originally written solely for the Macintosh by Innovative Software (publishers of the SmartWare Suite on the PC) based in Lenexa within Johnson County, Kansas; and was ready for release in late 1988. Informix wanted to enter the desktop software market with products that could link to their back-end databases, and Wingz seemed like a ...
Aldus Corporation was an American software company best known for its pioneering desktop publishing software. PageMaker, the company's most well-known product, ushered in the modern era of desktop computers such as the Macintosh seeing widespread use in the publishing industry. [1]
Keep. I am pretty sure filemaker and filemaker pro are distinct, and both are very common software. As a matter of fact, FileMaker and FileMaker Pro are, when people talk about them, the same product. Just take a look at the FileMaker page. I am still for a redirect. --Vikingstad 09:25, 20 Feb 2004 (UTC) I stand corrected. I'll vote for a ...