they were
located somewhere on the beach between Santa Monica and Pacific
Palissades...
with fantastic views on sunset and the Pacific from their offices...
And a dramatic view of the huge fire that burned down half of Malibu.
Not much work got done that day!
...Wonderful facility.
Ir
Yep, I visited them at the same time. They were looking at publishing
a CD-ROM which Syd Mead and I had worked on. Wonderful facility.
On 8/4/07, jbv <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:>
> I visited them shortly in 1992 (I was with a guy based in LA who was working
> on the CD-ROM about french movie maker
> As I recall, Bob Stein was the President and I think owner of Voyager when
> those CD were created. Originally, Voyager was located in LA, I think near
> Malibu or Venice Beach.
I visited them shortly in 1992 (I was with a guy based in LA who was working
on the CD-ROM about french movie maker
As I recall, Bob Stein was the President and I think owner of Voyager when
those CD were created. Originally, Voyager was located in LA, I think near
Malibu or Venice Beach. AFAIK, they ended up selling Voyager to a NY company
and relocated there. Afterwards, not a lot was heard from them in HC
cir
Already the Stravinsky Voyager CD is quite hard to find and selling
at $60 or so from used book and CD dealers.
But it seems more desirable for these to remain available to the
public, and useable on a non-legacy computer.
"If Monks Had Macs" was originally a Voyager HyperCard stack, if I'm
Colin Holgate frequents the Apple QuickTime Talk list.
And Colin is also an active participant of the Lingo-L (Director) list.
I had the pleasure to program Voyager's 'Salt of the Earth' CD-ROM. It
was one of the first disks to contain an entire feature film (albeit in
a small size!)
Voyager
How is the content stored? Resources? Got Resedit?
Talk about a cold trail! Not even Google knows this company! The CDs
show up in some library catalogs.
from http://lawcrawler.findlaw.com/MAD/publish.htm
--
stephen barncard
s a n f r a n c i s c o
- - - - - - - - - - - -
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On Jul 31, 2007, at 9:15 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
However, the copyright notice indicates a 1992 date. They list twp
programmers: Brock LaPorte and Colin Holgate.
I am almost certain that one of the programers from Voyager was on
one of these lists, but maybe that was Metacard or Oracl
Monday, July 30, 2007 11:00 pm
Subject: Re: Voyager Multimedia
To: How to use Revolution
> I got a lot of hits here with Google. Is this not the same company?:
> Mark
>
>
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P
e Complete Maus ,
by Art Spiegelman, a memoir of his father's experiences during the
Holocaust. Their products tend toward the beautiful and thoughtful.
Maybe there's nothing that can be done. Dunno...
Tim
On Jul 30, 2007, at 4:02 PM, J. Landman Gay wrote:
Timothy Miller wrote
thy Miller wrote:
I just love my Voyager Multimedia tutorial CDs.
I think Jacque knows the author. Maybe others.
It would be wonderful if someone could somehow make these work in
Rev. I imagine permission of the copyright holder would be necessary.
Has anyone thought about this?
I know one of
Timothy Miller wrote:
I just love my Voyager Multimedia tutorial CDs.
I think Jacque knows the author. Maybe others.
It would be wonderful if someone could somehow make these work in Rev. I
imagine permission of the copyright holder would be necessary.
Has anyone thought about this?
I
I just love my Voyager Multimedia tutorial CDs. I own all five.
Hunted them down one at a time ten years ago. They were out of print,
even then, and hard to find. Probably not a big commercial success in
the first place.
They're music appreciation tutorials.
Beethoven's 9t
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