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Company founded in 1988 by a number of ex-Xerox people and introduced their first product in the form of [[VisualWorks]] for UNIX workstations later the same year. Followed up with OS/2 32bit and MS Windows 16 versions in the early 90's.  
Company founded in 1988 by a number of ex-Xerox people and introduced their first product in the form of "ObjectWorks\Smalltalk" (Later renamed to [[VisualWorks]]) for UNIX workstations later the same year. Followed up with OS/2 32bit and MS Windows 16 versions in the early 90's.  


Signed an agreement with [[DEC]] in 1993 to develop Smalltalk systems for Alpha processors, this raised a few eyebrows in the informatics community since the VisualWorks system was at the time considered the weakest Smalltalk development system available although by the late 90's it had become one of the fastest it still lacked some common features found on other systems and had horrible documentation and support. But this is the reason VisualWorks was one of a very few development systems that supported both UNIX and Windows NT on Alpha processors.
Signed an agreement with [[DEC]] in 1993 to develop Smalltalk systems for Alpha processors, this raised a few eyebrows in the informatics community since the VisualWorks system was at the time considered the weakest Smalltalk development system available although by the late 90's it had become one of the fastest it still lacked some common features found on other systems and had horrible documentation and support. But this is the reason VisualWorks was one of a very few development systems that supported both UNIX and Windows NT on Alpha processors.

Revision as of 22:07, 19 February 2018

Company founded in 1988 by a number of ex-Xerox people and introduced their first product in the form of "ObjectWorks\Smalltalk" (Later renamed to VisualWorks) for UNIX workstations later the same year. Followed up with OS/2 32bit and MS Windows 16 versions in the early 90's.

Signed an agreement with DEC in 1993 to develop Smalltalk systems for Alpha processors, this raised a few eyebrows in the informatics community since the VisualWorks system was at the time considered the weakest Smalltalk development system available although by the late 90's it had become one of the fastest it still lacked some common features found on other systems and had horrible documentation and support. But this is the reason VisualWorks was one of a very few development systems that supported both UNIX and Windows NT on Alpha processors.

The company merged with Digitalk in 1995 to ParcPlace-Digitalk.

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