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Deluxe Paint V on the Amiga, showing detail from The Birth of Venus, included as a sample picture starting with the first release in 1985 [1] Deluxe Paint, often referred to as DPaint, is a bitmap graphics editor created by Dan Silva for Electronic Arts and published for the then-new Amiga 1000 in November 1985. A series of updated versions ...
Deluxe Corporation was founded as Deluxe Check Printers in Saint Paul, Minnesota by William Roy (W. R.) Hotchkiss, [6] after Hotchkiss secured a $300 loan. [7] [8] Hotchkiss was the creator of speed-enhancing inventions, including the Hotchkiss Imprinting Press (patented in 1925), a two-way perforator, and the Hotchkiss Lithograph Press (patented in 1928).
Up to six players can play at once, and any empty spot in the game is filled up by "bots," or computer AI personalities. [2] Lux has over 900 maps, each varying in size, shape, and complexity. [3] Regardless of the map, the objective of the game is the same: eliminate all other players so only one remains.
Brilliance is a bitmap graphics editor for the Amiga computer, published by Digital Creations in 1993. [1] [2] Although marketed as a single package, Brilliance in reality consisted of two separate (but near identical-looking) applications.
Movie Edit Pro (also known as Magix Video Deluxe in Europe and sometimes Magix Movie Studio in the United States) is a video editing software developed by Magix for semi-professional and DIY users for Windows PC. It is the best selling video software in Europe, and is most famous for its ease-of-learn and rendering stability. [1]
DeLuxe Color is Eastmancolor-based, with certain adaptations for improved compositing for printing (similar to Technicolor's "selective printing") and for mass-production of prints. Eastmancolor, first introduced in 1950, was one of the first widely-successful "single strip color" processes, and eventually displaced three-strip Technicolor.