Forethought, Inc. Explained

Forethought, Inc.
Type:Private
Industry:Software
Fate:Acquired by Microsoft

Forethought, Inc. was a computer software company, best known as developers of what is now Microsoft PowerPoint.

History

In late 1983, Rob Campbell and Taylor Pohlman founded Forethought, Inc in order to develop object-oriented bit-mapped application software. In 1984, they hired Robert Gaskins, a former Ph.D. student at the University of California, Berkeley, in exchange for a large percentage of the company's stock. He and software developer Dennis Austin led the development of a program called Presenter, which they later renamed PowerPoint.[1] Also in 1984, Forethought acquired the rights to publish a Macintosh version of a DOS-based application called Nutshell. They named the Mac version FileMaker and it soon became enormously successful.[2]

PowerPoint 1.0 was released in 1987 for the Apple Macintosh. It ran in black and white, generating text-and-graphics pages for overhead transparencies. A new full-color version of PowerPoint shipped a year later after the first color Macintosh came to market. Later in 1987, Forethought and PowerPoint were purchased by Microsoft Corporation for $14 million (~$ in).[3] In May 1990 the first Windows 3.0 versions were produced. Since 1990, PowerPoint has been a standard part of the Microsoft Office suite of applications except for the Basic Edition. Microsoft PowerPoint would go on to become the most used and sought after presentation suite, having a 95% market share.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Parker . Ian . Absolute Powerpoint . https://web.archive.org/web/20210826132940/https://www.asc.ohio-state.edu/wilkins.5/group/powerpt.html . 26 August 2021 . 23 August 2021 . Ohio State University.
  2. Web site: Koenig . Glenn . 2004-04-02 . The Origin of FileMaker . 2018-01-03 . Dancing-Data.
  3. News: 1987-07-31 . COMPANY NEWS; Microsoft Buys Software Unit . The New York Times . subscription . 2006-12-02.