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Kaleida and Labs
Apple and IBM created two new companies called Taligent and Kaleida Labs as part of the alliance.
Hopkins also wrote demonstrations and programming examples of the ScriptX multimedia scripting language created by the Apple / IBM research spinoff Kaleida Labs, developed various OpenLaszlo applications and components, and is a hacker artist known for his artistic cellular automata.
Kaleida Labs was one of several joint ventures between Apple Computer and IBM during the early 1990s which set out to produce the common multimedia platform Kaleida Media Player and the object oriented scripting language ScriptX which would run on top of it, both of which failed to gain significant traction.
Following the departure of Goldhaber in 1993, Mike Braun of IBM became CEO of Kaleida Labs, and the company ’ s focus was narrowed.
Following the closure of Kaleida Labs, Wainwright went on to serve as the principal architect of MaxScript, a scripting language for 3D Studio Max that has been used to process content for gaming and 3D applications such as the Maxis Sims programs ( see Automating The Sims Character Animation Pipeline with MaxScript ).
In early 1995, Kaleida Labs demonstrated the ability of ScriptX to support distributed objects over the Internet, and to serve dynamically generated web content ( see ScriptX and the World Wide Web: Link Globally, Interact Locally ).
In November 1995, Apple Computer and IBM announced the closure of Kaleida Labs, effective in January 1996.
Closure of Kaleida Labs was scheduled for early 1996, but the parent companies announced that they would ship ScriptX 1. 5 anyhow.
ScriptX Version 1. 5 shipped almost concurrently with the closure of Kaleida Labs.
* Kaleida Labs Inc. ( 1994 ).
* Kaleida Labs Inc. ( 1994 ).
* Kaleida Labs Inc. ( 1996 ).
* Kaleida Labs Inc. ( 1996 ).
* Kaleida Labs Inc. ( 1996 ).
* Kaleida Labs Inc. ( 1995 ).
" Kaleida Labs Ships ScriptX Multimedia Programs "
Kaleida Labs and Virgin Entertainment.
In 1992, IBM and Apple Computer Inc. appointed Goldhaber as president and founding CEO of their joint multi-media venture, Kaleida Labs.
In 1981 Espinosa became a member of the Apple Macintosh team and has worked on many projects at Apple since, including Mac OS, A / UX, HyperCard, Taligent, Kaleida Labs, AppleScript, and Mac OS X.

Kaleida and its
In its early days, Kaleida had several other projects underway, including a proposed operating system for television set-top boxes that was to be based around the Kaleida Media Player software.
Throughout its brief history, Kaleida maintained cross-platform development efforts for Windows ( both Windows 3. 1 and Windows 95 ), the Macintosh ( supporting both the 68000 and PowerPC platforms ), and OS / 2.
At the time of its formation, Kaleida ’ s ScriptX was envisioned as an authoring platform for CD-ROMs, and later for DVDs, which would hold much more information.
Since its purchase by Kaleida Health, the facility has been renamed The Women and Children's Hospital of Buffalo.

Kaleida and companies
Kaleida was one of the earliest companies to post a corporate website.

Kaleida and had
In 1997, when Bill Gates was asked what trend or development over the past 20 years had really caught him by surprise, his reply was: " Kaleida and Taligent had less impact than we expected.
Toshiba, which had supported Kaleida ’ s set-top box effort, became a minority stakeholder.
ScriptX was implemented not in C ++, but rather in C itself, using an extensive library called Objects in C that Wainwright had developed before joining Kaleida, and sold to Kaleida at the company ’ s inception.
Kaleida had been founded partly as an authoring environment for applications based on CD-ROMs.
By late 1995, however, the directors of Kaleida realized that the direction of multimedia development had shifted, and that Sun Microsystems ’ s Java language was better positioned than ScriptX to take advantage of the Internet.
In effect, the Netscape browser had taken on the functions that were intended for the Kaleida Media Player, while Java was seen to have taken on the role that was intended for ScriptX ( although JavaScript eventually succeeded where Java failed as a client side scripting language ).
Kaleida had already shipped Version 1. 0 of ScriptX early in 1995, and a few development efforts were underway.
However, most potential developers had been taking a wait-and-watch approach to the Kaleida Media Player, waiting for Kaleida to solve performance problems and ship a more stable version of ScriptX.

Kaleida and Media
The company ’ s objective was the development of a common multimedia platform, the Kaleida Media Player, that would run on both Windows and Macintosh computers.
The Kaleida Media Player was the runtime environment for the company ’ s main product known as ScriptX, a programming language and object library for authoring multimedia content.
Kaleida sought to bundle the Kaleida Media Player as system software with new personal computers.
At the same time, CD-ROM developers could ship the Kaleida Media Player with content to support existing Windows and Macintosh systems.
In late 1993 and early 1994, the company ’ s objective was for the Kaleida Media Player to run on a reference platform consisting of either a 25 MHz Motorola 68030 or a 25 MHz Intel 80486 processor running with 4 MB of random access memory.
The Kaleida Media Player was a complex interpreter that required several megabytes to run, and Kaleida never achieved effective performance on a system with less than 16 MB of random access memory.
The Kaleida Media Player was to be a runtime environment that would allow presentations, games, educational software, kiosks, and many other kinds of entertainment to run on multiple platforms.

Kaleida and designed
In addition to the ScriptX language, the Kaleida development platform offered an extensive class library of more than 240 classes, many of them designed to support multimedia as well as create customized user interfaces.

Kaleida and .
Kaleida was to create an object-oriented, cross-platform multimedia scripting language which would enable developers to create entirely new kinds of applications that would harness the power of the platform.
Kaleida folded in 1995.
Additional facilities include free clinics such as the Kaleida Health's Niagara Family Health Center and the Lighthouse Free Medical Clinic, a program run by UB medical students.
Kaleida ’ s mission from then on was to complete and support the ScriptX language and multimedia object library.

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