Company of Science and Art

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Company_of_Science_and_Art an entity of type: Thing

Company of Science and Art (CoSA) was a small software company headquartered in Providence, Rhode Island. It was founded in 1990 by Greg Deocampo (also a member of the video art collective Emergency Broadcast Network), David Foster, David Herbstman, and David Simons. William J. O'Farrell became its CEO in 1990. It operated for slightly less than three years. Before After Effects, in 1991, CoSA published PACo—one of the first cross-platform streaming digital video applications. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Company of Science and Art
rdf:langString Company of Science and Art
rdf:langString Company of Science and Art
xsd:integer 43301929
xsd:integer 1114011728
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Aldus Corporation
xsd:integer 1993
rdf:langString Acquired by Aldus Corporation
xsd:integer 1990
rdf:langString U.S.
rdf:langString Cosa logo thumb.jpg
rdf:langString Company of Science and Art (CoSA) was a small software company headquartered in Providence, Rhode Island. It was founded in 1990 by Greg Deocampo (also a member of the video art collective Emergency Broadcast Network), David Foster, David Herbstman, and David Simons. William J. O'Farrell became its CEO in 1990. It operated for slightly less than three years. However, during its brief existence, CoSA created the category-defining After Effects desktop animation and compositing program, releasing version 1.0 in 1992. In 1993, CoSA was acquired by the Aldus Corporation; Aldus was in turn acquired by Adobe in 1994. The name is currently used by an unrelated visual effects company, . Before After Effects, in 1991, CoSA published PACo—one of the first cross-platform streaming digital video applications.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2782
rdf:langString Acquired byAldus Corporation
xsd:gYear 1990

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