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Hub AI
NetObjects Fusion AI simulator
(@NetObjects Fusion_simulator)
Hub AI
NetObjects Fusion AI simulator
(@NetObjects Fusion_simulator)
NetObjects Fusion
NetObjects Fusion (NOF) is a web design tool, from 1996 to 2001 developed and distributed by NetObjects, Inc., marketed from 2001 until 2009 by Web.com (formerly dubbed Website Pros), which bought the application in 2001, and from July 2009 on distributed again by the re-established NetObjects, Inc.
NetObjects Fusion has a graphical user interface and generates HTML or (since release 11) XHTML through its own proprietary database.
The origins of NetObjects Fusion date back to the 1980s. At Apple Computer, Samir Arora, David Kleinberg, and Sal Arora conducted research on early information navigation applications before the term "browser" was coined and before the invention of Mosaic.
Development was transferred to the new-founded company Rae Technology, a spin-off from Apple Computer. At Rae, the two Arora brothers and David Kleinberg developed an object-oriented environment called SOLO (Structure of Linked Objects), which is the technological basis of NetObjects Fusion.
NetObjects, Inc. was founded in 1995 with an initial investment by Rae Technology to complete the development of NetObjects Fusion.
Clement Mok, Victor Zaud, Karen Rall, and Susan Kare, interactivity designers, were contracted to accomplish the development of NetObjects Fusion and design its interface.
The hopes of the newly founded company were high, and the reactions of the market and IT observers to the first two releases of NetObjects Fusion in 1996 and 1997 were very positive. Among other awards NetObjects Fusion received were InfoWorld's Analyst Choice Award and PC Magazine's Editors' Choice.
After a few years of great success, NOF fell back in market share and reputation against the competition, mainly Dreamweaver, though it always kept a dedicated user community. In the last few years, sales showed a slight downward tendency, staying flat in 2008 with a revenue of $2.5 million. Revenue from software sales was $2.44 million in 2007 (no new version of NetObjects Fusion was released), down from $3.58 million in 2006 and $3.86 million in 2005.
NetObjects Fusion
NetObjects Fusion (NOF) is a web design tool, from 1996 to 2001 developed and distributed by NetObjects, Inc., marketed from 2001 until 2009 by Web.com (formerly dubbed Website Pros), which bought the application in 2001, and from July 2009 on distributed again by the re-established NetObjects, Inc.
NetObjects Fusion has a graphical user interface and generates HTML or (since release 11) XHTML through its own proprietary database.
The origins of NetObjects Fusion date back to the 1980s. At Apple Computer, Samir Arora, David Kleinberg, and Sal Arora conducted research on early information navigation applications before the term "browser" was coined and before the invention of Mosaic.
Development was transferred to the new-founded company Rae Technology, a spin-off from Apple Computer. At Rae, the two Arora brothers and David Kleinberg developed an object-oriented environment called SOLO (Structure of Linked Objects), which is the technological basis of NetObjects Fusion.
NetObjects, Inc. was founded in 1995 with an initial investment by Rae Technology to complete the development of NetObjects Fusion.
Clement Mok, Victor Zaud, Karen Rall, and Susan Kare, interactivity designers, were contracted to accomplish the development of NetObjects Fusion and design its interface.
The hopes of the newly founded company were high, and the reactions of the market and IT observers to the first two releases of NetObjects Fusion in 1996 and 1997 were very positive. Among other awards NetObjects Fusion received were InfoWorld's Analyst Choice Award and PC Magazine's Editors' Choice.
After a few years of great success, NOF fell back in market share and reputation against the competition, mainly Dreamweaver, though it always kept a dedicated user community. In the last few years, sales showed a slight downward tendency, staying flat in 2008 with a revenue of $2.5 million. Revenue from software sales was $2.44 million in 2007 (no new version of NetObjects Fusion was released), down from $3.58 million in 2006 and $3.86 million in 2005.
