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==History==
In the mid-1960's, the [[Jet Propulsion Laboratory]] (JPL) of the [[California Institute of Technology]] (CalTech) was using
By 1973 the program had evolved into a file management program called JPLDIS (Jet Propulsion Laboratory Database-management and Information-retrival System) written in [[Fortran|FORTRAN]], running on a [[UNIVAC 1108]] mainframe.
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In 1978, while at JPL, [[Wayne Ratliff]] wrote a database program in assembly language for [[CP/M]] based microcomputers to help him win the football pool at the office. He based it on Jeb Long's JPLDIS and called it Vulcan, after Mr. Spock of Star Trek.
In late 1980, George Tate, of [[Ashton-Tate]], entered into a marketing agreement with Wayne Ratliff.
According to the http://www.foxprohistory.org/ site, JPLDIS was the reason why
That ruling was based on a legal doctrine known as "unclean hands". Judge Hatter explained that Ashton-Tate knew that the dBase program development was based on JPLDIS, and that fact was kept hidden
==See also==
[[Vulcan (programming language)]]
==References==
{{Reflist}}
[[Category:NASA]]
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