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・ Software pipelining
・ Software plus services
・ Software portability
・ Software Preservation Society
・ Software Process Achievement Award
・ Software Process simulation
・ Software product line
・ Software Product Lines Online Tools
・ Software product management
・ Software project management
・ Software Projects
・ Software propagation
・ Software protection dongle
・ Software prototyping
・ Software publisher
Software Publishing Corporation
・ Software quality
・ Software quality analyst
・ Software quality assurance
・ Software quality control
・ Software quality management
・ Software Quality Systems AG
・ Software regression
・ Software rejuvenation
・ Software release life cycle
・ Software release train
・ Software reliability testing
・ Software remastering
・ Software rendering
・ Software repository


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Software Publishing Corporation : ウィキペディア英語版
Software Publishing Corporation

Software Publishing Corporation (SPC) was a Mountain View, California-based manufacturer of business software, originally well known for its "pfs:" series (and its subsequent "pfs:First" and "pfs:Professional" derivative series) of business software products, it was ultimately best known for its pioneering Harvard Graphics business and presentation graphics program.
Though SPC's earliest product was for the Apple II personal computer, most of its products were for use on text-based DOS desktop computers, with non-graphical-user-interfaces (GUI), long before the graphical GUI either Macintosh or Microsoft Windows existed. A salient benefit of Harvard Graphics, then, was that it brought sophisticated on-screen graphics capabilities to computers running the normally non-graphical, text-based DOS operating system. This factor played a role in the company's ultimate demise in 1996, as Microsoft Windows was shipping on most desktop computers. Windows incorporated built-in graphical capabilities, so much of what Harvard Graphics provided was no longer needed. SPC scrambled to develop a Windows version of Harvard Graphics, but big competitors and their Windows-native business and presentation graphics tools had so penetrated the Windows market by then that it was just too little, too late. As DOS-based PCs began to disappear, so did SPC's revenues.
==Early history==
SPC was established in 1980 by three former Hewlett-Packard employees, Fred Gibbons, Janelle Bedke, and John Page, with an eye to producing packaged software for personal computers like the Apple II. The first application to be launched was the "Personal Filing System" (PFS), a simple database program for Apple II computers. With the advent of the IBM PC the following year, though, the company quickly shifted focus to the burgeoning DOS-based desktop computer market, which also included a fast-growing number of IBM PC-compatible computers. The Apple II PFS product eventually led to the "pfs:" series of products for DOS.
By early 1984, ''InfoWorld'' estimated that SPC was the world's ninth-largest microcomputer-software company, with $14 million in 1983 sales. In 1984 IBM executed an OEM-style agreement pursuant to which SPC would develop the IBM Assistant Series, which was an only slightly enhanced, but completely rebranded version of the "pfs:" family of products (described in the next section) such that no mention of SPC was present in the software or its documentation; and which IBM intended to sell with its IBM PC and PCjr computers. IBM advertised the suite using a Chaplin-esque figure getting all of his ducks in a row, in a Super Bowl TV ad, and in print ads. By only a year later, in 1985 SPC company had achieved $50 million in revenue from the IBM deal, alone.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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