ColorGraphics Weather Systems: Difference between revisions

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'''ColorGraphics Weather Systems''' is a pioneering [[computer graphics]] company that produces a series of systems for displaying [[weather forecast]] data used by television stations. Originally based on custom hardware, today their products are software-based systems running on commodity systems.
 
ColorGraphics was formed in 1979 as a partnership between Terry Kelly and Richard Daly. Kelly was a TV weatherman who started a business in 1974 to sell custom weather forecasts to smaller businessorganizations like ski resorts and local hiway departments. He had also introduced a number of new concepts in TV broadcast, including producing movies of moving cloud cover by hand-photographing satellite images using a Bolex camera.<ref>Nelson, pg. 306</ref>
 
Kelly and Daly had both worked in the [[University of Wisconsin]]'s Space Science and Engineering department, developers of the [[PDP-11]]-based "McIdas" (Man-Computer Interactive Data Access System) weather display system,. thatMcIdas downloadedused and displayeddownloaded satellite cloud cover images and superimposed them on locally generated maps. Designed for the [[National Weather Service]], McIdas was a high-end system well beyond the budgets of a television station.<ref>Nelson, pg. 302</ref> Kelly's idea was to adapt the McIdas concept for lower cost [[home computer]] systems that were appearing in the late 1970s. Their first system, "LiveLine", was based on the [[Apple II]], which could not be [[genlock]]ed, so a TV camera had to be pointed at the screen to send the video into the production systems. In spite of its simplicity and low resolution, the fast production and "high tech" look caught on, and by 1982 updated versions were almost universal, replacing [[bluescreen]] systems on cardboard maps that had previously been used.<ref>Nelson, pg. 303</ref><ref>[http://www.wxc.com/corporate/history.html "Weather Central History"]</ref>
 
Kelly's idea was to adapt the McIdas concept for lower cost [[home computer]] systems that were appearing in the late 1970s. Their first system, "LiveLine", was based on the [[Apple II]], which could not be [[genlock]]ed, so a TV camera had to be pointed at the screen to send the video into the production systems. In spite of its simplicity and low resolution, the fast production and "high tech" look caught on, and by 1982 updated versions were almost universal, replacing [[bluescreen]] systems on cardboard maps that had previously been used.<ref>Nelson, pg. 303</ref><ref name=wxc>[http://www.wxc.com/corporate/history.html "Weather Central History"]</ref>
In 1982 the company was purchased by [[Dynatech]], an expanding electronics company. Dynatech later purchased [[Cromemco]] and rolled the two companies together, before divesting themselves of all their media properties in the early 1990s. Kelly and Daly purchased the rights back from Dynatech in 1994, operating under the Weather Central name. In 1995 they introduced the new "GENESIS" platform on [[Silicon Graphics]] computers, which later moved onto [[Hewlett-Packard]] workstations, and finally PCs.
 
In 1982 the company was purchased by [[Dynatech]], an expanding electronics company. Dynatech later purchased [[Cromemco]] and rolled the two companies together, before divesting themselves of all their media properties in the early 1990s. Kelly and Daly purchased the rights back from Dynatech in 1994, operating under the Weather Central name. In 1995 they introduced the new "GENESIS" platform on [[Silicon Graphics]] computers, which later moved onto [[Hewlett-Packard]] workstations,.<ref and finally PCs.name=wxc/>
 
==References==