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         Scriptx Programming:     more detail

41. Andrew Nicholson's Résumé
OIC) and the language implementation used in the multimedia player scriptx . Investigationof new objectoriented programming environments and better methods
http://www.lesto.com/andrewn/resume.html
20331 83rd Ave W.
Edmonds, WA 98026-6731
U.S.A. Phone: Fax: Email: andrewn@lesto.com
Andrew Nicholson
Interests: Woodworking. Investing. Traditional animation techniques. Hiking. Scuba diving. Distributed computing environments. Compiler technologies. Object oriented languages.
Work History
Lesto Consulting, Inc.
May 2002
- present
Started a consulting company specializing in developing custom applications for Linux.
Freelance Consulting - California
April 1996
- June 1998
Retail web-site design and implementation. Performance tuning, and consulting to various engineering teams.
System administration for SGI and Hitachi.
Kaleida Labs, Inc.
April 1994
- January 1996
Technical lead for the core engineering team. Coding responsibilities included Text, Font, Graphics, Objects-in-C and any area not adequately covered by the team. February 1993
- April 1994
Manager for the core ScriptX engineering team of 14-16 people. Managed project schedules and coordinated the work. Responsible for the re-architecture and implementation of ScriptX. Continued coding areas of ScriptX where we did not have staff coverage. August 1992
- February 1993
Joined Kaleida to work on the object system (OIC) and the language implementation used in the multimedia player "ScriptX". The first prototype was built in 4 months. Coordinated the re-architecture of the product from the prototype.

42. The Tower Of Babel
Python OOP/SCR R Rex REBOL Rigal SAS Sather Scheme FUNC ScriptEase scriptx SDL SelfSimula Sisal A High performance, portable, Parallel programming Language.
http://opop.nols.com/babel.html
This is a listing of all the computer languages that I know of and links to group categories on Yahoo to provide more information on the languages. I will list here every language that I know of, program in, or have ever heard of. I ENCOURAGE you to send me the names of any languages that are missing here, and a link to some more information on that language. Each language also should have a category associated with it according to what I know about the language. The key is: IMP - imperative language FUNC - Functional Programming Language OOP - Object Oriented SCR - Scripting language MAT - mathematical analysis language DAT - Database Langugage LOW - Low level language DOC - Document preparation LOP - Logic Oriented Programming language PDA - Languages for PDAs (palmpilot, etc) MISC- I have no idea how to categorize this, or, I know nothing about it. I'm not claiming all of my categorizations are right. Please correct me if you think anything is amiss. Also, since I don't mind if this page gets ridiculously long, I'm interested in any and all dialects of languages as well as original languages themselves. So Guile, and Lisp make it into the list. If you know of anything I've omitted, mail me ABC Ada Agora ... Algae MAT Algol 60 Algol 68 AMOS Amulet ... Assembly LOW Awk SCR B I apologize but this is the only link that I could find regarding B.

43. Mah Jongg Games At Heuse.com
Screamer An extension of Common Lisp providing nondeterministic backtrackingand constraint programming. scriptx - Kaleida Labs.
http://www.heuse.com/programming-s.htm
Mah Jongg Games
Mahjongg Solitaire featuring 120 Layouts, 24 Tile Sets, 36 Backgrounds, 15 relaxing music tracks
screen displaying 10 statistics along with graph showing all ranks in all 120 Layouts for each player.
The layouts range from 72 tiles to 288 tiles size. Has Undo, Pair, Peek, and Shuffle features as well. Main Options Layouts Profile ... Scores Mah Jongg Games Mah Jongg Games
Programming Languages - S
S* - Dasgupta, Simon Fraser U, 1978. A microprogramming language schema, which instantiates to a complete language for any given micromachine. Has Pascal-like syntax, with pre- and post-conditions. "Towards a Microprogramming Language Schema", S. Dasgupta, Proc 11th Ann Workshop Microprogramming (MICRO-11), 1978, pp.144-153. S*A - Dasgupta, 1981. A high-level architecture description language, designed to be used with S*. S*M - A nonprocedural hardware description language. "S*M, An Axiomatic, Non-procedural Hardware Description Language for CLocked Architectures", P.A. Wilsey, MS Thesis, U Southwestern Louisiana, 1985. S3 - ALGOL-like system language for the ICL 2900 computer.

44. PO - Languages
Alphebetical list of programming languages. Explains the usage of each language and describes the Category Computers programming Languages Directories...... Scheme Scheme is a statically scoped and properly tail-recursive dialect of theLisp programming language; scriptx -; SDL -; Self - Self is an object-oriented
http://users.utu.fi/sisasa/oasis/oasis-lang.html
Main page Search What's new Non-frame version ... Mail to author
Languages
and program development environments

Last updated: July 30. 1997
Jump >> Most popular languages Languages from A to Z Language research Misc topics
Most popular languages
Languages from A to Z
  • Ada Object-Oriented general purpose, standardized language
  • Agora Prototype-based Object-Oriented language family
  • ALF ALF is a language which combines functional and logic programming techniques
  • APL APL is a programming language best known for its use of non-ASCII symbols, including a few Greek letters
  • April April is a programming language specifically designed for building MAS(which execute) over the Internet. MAS=Multi Agent System.
  • Assembly Only for brave individuals
  • Awk awk interprets a special-purpose language that makes it possible to handle simple data-reformatting jobs easily
  • BABEL BABEL is a functional logic language whose operational semantics is based on lazy narrowing and provides some higher-order features
  • Basic Beginner's All Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code
  • Beta BETA is a modern object-oriented language with comprehensive facilities for procedural and functional programming
  • Blue Blue is an object-oriented programming language that was developed especially for teaching.

45. Résumé
Quicktime, graphics and general programming for Sophie's World (C; Mac/Win). Investigationof next generation authoring systems scriptx, SK8 and Apple Dylan.
http://www.elegantchaos.com/people/resume.html
news
info
people
software
stuff

about
past lives
colleagues
Name: Sam Deane Phone: (available on request) Email: sam@elegantchaos.com Date of birth: 12th November, 1969 Qualifications: Computer Science BSc (1st Class Hons), Bristol University.
Employment History
Present Day, Freelance Programmer and Shareware Author. Clients include Feral Interactive FilmFour / Channel 4 Abbey Road Studios Real World ... Multimedia Corporation , Bristol University, Apple UK. Recent work includes porting games from Windows to the Mac (Theme Park World, Championship Manager), and a Windows/Mac screensaver for FilmFour.
Also OpenGL, Java Beans, Quicktime Java Programming, Perl CGI scripting (UNIX/NT/Mac), Multimedia authoring (Mac/Win), Plugin writing in C/C++ (Xtras, Scripting Additions, Modifiers etc), AppleScript and Filemaker work.
Real World Multimedia
Design and implementation of an interrupt based architecture for mixing, generating, filtering and synchronising multiple sound channels (C++; Mac/Win).
Design and implementation of a C++ framework for the creation of mTropolis plugins. Coding of a number of plugins for mTropolis (C++; Mac/Win).

46. WSH Bazaar Link Page
Containing valid info about TCP/IP programming. scriptx web page http//www.meadroid.com/scriptx/scriptx is a control which supports also a couple of other
http://www.borncity.com/WSHBazaar/links.htm
Windows Script Host Bazaar Microsoft WSH sites Vendors
Since Windows Scripting Host (WSH) initial release there are a few web sites dealing with WSH. Below are the links that leads you directly to the sites of interest for WSH programmers.
Microsoft
Microsoft's Scripting web site
http://msdn.microsoft.com/scripting

This site contains the docs you need for scripting: WSH 2 help VBScript help JScript help . You can download also the last recent versions of script engines Windows Script Host Microsoft Script Debugger , and more. Microsoft's German Scripting web site
http://www.microsoft.com/germany/scripting
Same content as in the English scripting site, but all in German. Microsoft's ADO web site
http://www.microsoft.com/data/ado
Helpful, if you intend to access data bases using Active Data Objects (ADO). Microsoft's ADSI web site
http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/techinfo/howitworks/activedirectory/adsilinks.asp
This site deals with Active Directory and how to access Active Directory Services Interface (ADSI) using scripts.

47. Neue Seite 1
Containing valid info about TCP/IP programming. www.voidpointer.com, Script DrivenInternet (SDI) web page http//www.meadroid.com/scriptx/, scriptx web page
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Guenter_Born/WSHBazaar/wsh0.htm
Windows Scripting Host link page
The Windows Scripting Host (WSH) is one of the most interesting things which Microsoft has released since the MS-DOS batch programs for the Windows users. Finally we got the tool to create programs to automate our tasks under Windows. After writing two books about the WSH I feel we can do nearly all those things for which others use Visual Basic, Visual C, Delphi or other environments. Why waste hundred of bucks to stuff your hard disk full with files, if we can get an equivalent programming language for free? Unfortunately Microsoft forgot to tell us about this marvelous thing. There is nearly no or only poor support for WSH, VBScript and JScript. But thanks to many computer enthusiasts and the Internet, we have now much more resource (as I found as I started with WSH 9 months ago). Here I like to give a few links which leads you directly to the sites of interest for WSH programmers. microsoft.public.scripting.wsh Windows Scripting Host newsgroup This is the newsgroup about the Windows Scripting Host, where you get the answers to your question.

48. Computers And Programming
AutoWeb 1.0 Docs; Two Servers, One Interface. Dylan; HyperLatex; UF/NA PerlArchive; scriptx; Self; Tcl Tk. C++, GNU, Literate programming more
http://www.comedia.com/hot/comp.html
Computers and Programming
Back to the hotlist This page maintained by CoMedia Consulting

49. Computer Science Internship Program - Jobs
This project will implement a set of these patterns as VisualAge parts and demonstratetheir use in the VA programming environment. Project scriptx Games
http://www.cs.duke.edu/~rodger/csip/jobs.html
Examples of CSIP jobs
Alphatronix
Significant student or "Hacker" level experience is required in UNIX and least some experience with one of the following operating systems, VMS, MAC, NetWare, DOS, or Windows 3.1+ Required Classes: C++ (prefer 2 semesters), OO programming class or a computer lab with a project that demonstrates the students understanding of the language. Any person that applies must be productive as a C++ software programmer working in the UNIX world when they walk through the door on day #1 (at a student level). We use a team approach where two or three co-ops are assigned to an experienced engineer. The team builds program blocks for use in an object oriented data management product that Alphatronix markets into the UNIX world. Additionally, slots are available for assignment into our testing division where they are tasked to reproduce crashes or other software failures prior to version release. These slots require an above average understanding of the UNIX os, the various shells, "daemons", the kernel, networks and NFS. When there is a crash the engineers will need to reproduce all the situations that led up to, or allowed the crash or panic. Scripts in either vi, emacs, perl, C or C++ will need to be written to automatically reproduce the environment that failed so the fix can be evaluated.

50. Programming Language
Kaleida Labs developers of the platform-indepedent Kaleida Media Player andof scriptx, the dynamic object-oriented programming language for multimedia;
http://kmh.ync.ac.kr/comScience/oop/pl.html
Programming Language
  • Compass Point Software, Inc. - specializes in consulting and contract programming services in Microsoft Windows Development and C/C++ Language Development.
  • Kaleida Labs - developers of the platform-indepedent Kaleida Media Player and of ScriptX, the dynamic object-oriented programming language for multimedia
  • Databases:FIDE at St Andrews - provides information about project members and access to a number of papers about persistence and the database programming language s PS-algol and Napier88.
  • CA-Clipper [Remco Broekhoff] - a general purpose, high-level programming language well suited to corporate and commercial applications development.
  • Bounce - a real time visual data flow programming language , designed to create interactive graphical simulations, and to filter and control midi, serial, ethernet, and other devices.
  • LIFE: Logic, Inheritance, Functions, and Equations - an experimental programming language proposing to integrate three orthogonal programming paradigms proven useful for symbolic computation.
  • Ada Information Clearinghouse (AdaIC) - provides information, reports, and resources related to the Ada

51. Windows NT/2000 Scripting
only describes NT/2000 batch programming (for DOS batch programming Dirk Van WSHby Clarence Washington; Winscripter WSH by Daren Thiel; scriptx Free scriptx
http://allserv.rug.ac.be/~srogge/scripting/
0. Win32 ports of common Unix commands
by Ted Felix tail , tar, touch, ...). A Linux-like Windows 95/98/NT
1. Batch programming
This section only describes NT/2000 batch programming (for DOS batch programming: Dirk Van Deun Tom Lavedas Timo Salmi's Assorted Batch Tricks , etc.). NT Batch programming: NT commando help Steve Hardy's NT Scripting John Savill's NT batch FAQ Rob van der Woude's Scripting Pages
2. Windows Scripting Host
I am only interested in ECMA-script (JScript) not the VB trash. Links:
3. Samples
  • Convert Number to Roman Numeral (by Mark Crossley)
  • Remarks: 1. EQU, LEQ and GEQ should be in UPPER case! 2. 'goto return' can be replaced by ':eof'
  • Show some colors (by Steven Rogge)
  • @echo off rem batch-file die alle kleurcombinaties toont rem Steven Rogge, 03.04.2000 for %%i in (0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F) do ( for %%j in (0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F) do ( color %%i%%j ) ) color

    52. Eiffel Forum . Main . AppleMediaLanguage
    AML has been modified extensively to suit the needs of multimedia programming, whereit replace the Language K component of AMT with a product called scriptx
    http://efsa.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/view/Main/AppleMediaLanguage
    Eiffel Forum . Main .
    AppleMediaLanguage
    Eiffel Forum Main Software Home ... Search
    AML: Eiffel without realizing it! Here's an article of mine describing Apple's Eiffel-like multimedia language. I originally released it on 11 August 1998, but have updated it slightly for this posting. RogerBrowne Background Eiffel has spawned several Eiffel-like languages, including Sather and Blue. Another Eiffel-like language was sold for a while by Apple Computer as part of their multimedia toolkit. I started to write an article about this language for EiffelOutlookMagazine , but didn't finish it before Eiffel Outlook ceased publication. Here it is ... I hope you find it interesting. Introduction In the early 1990's, the most commercially-successful of the Eiffel-like languages was in widespread use by Apple Macintosh developers - but most of them were blissfully unaware of its Eiffel connection. Apple's AMT/PE is a pair of companion products - the Apple Media Tool (AMT) and the Eiffel-inspired Programming Environment (PE). The Apple Media Tool is a visual object-oriented multimedia authoring tool. It allows users to quickly and easily assemble media elements (graphics, video, text and sound) and then add interactivity and navigation without the need to use scripting.

    53. Sheng Liang's Research Summary
    Modern programming languages offer a high degree of expressiveness, conciseness Indeed,Tcl, Python, scriptx, ML, Haskell, Telescript, Java and ActiveVRML have
    http://www.cs.yale.edu/users/liang-sheng/research-summary.html
    Research Summary
    Modern programming languages offer a high degree of expressiveness, conciseness, flexibility, reliability, and safety. These characteristics make them suitable for today's increasingly complex software systems. Indeed, Tcl Python ScriptX ML ... Java and ActiveVRML have all found use in a variety of application domains. Therefore, there is a practical need for designing, implementing, and deploying such languages. There are, however, major obstacles in unleashing the full potential of modern programming languages. First, it is hard to properly design, cleanly specify, and fully understand every single feature in a complex language. Second, modern languages do not correspond to the physical machine as closely as, for example, C, and therefore require more work to implement efficiently. Third, implementations of modern languages often lack good programming environment (e.g., debugging and profiling) support. Finally, different languages use different calling conventions, run-time data representations and memory management mechanisms, and are therefore hard to interoperate. My thesis work, a compiler construction method for modern programming languages, addresses all of the above problems. The key technical contributions are as follows:

    54. Richard Jones' Garbage Collection Bibliography
    In International Conference on Logic programming, pages 1832, 1997. Available here. InformationProcessing Letters, 23(1)33-37, 1986. scriptx Kaleida Labs.
    http://www.cs.ukc.ac.uk/people/staff/rej/gcbib/gcbibK.html
    the Garbage Collection Bibliography
    This bibliography may be freely used for non-commercial purposes. It may also be freely distributed provided that this notice is included. I would be most grateful to receive additions, corrections and URLs of electronically available papers. The full bibliography is also available in compressed BibTeX (140k) and PostScript (142k) forms. Further GC-related material can be found on the Garbage Collection page Richard Jones Last updated 13 February 2003. [A] [B] [C] [D] ... [Z]
    M. Frans Kaashoek, Andrew Tanenbaum, S. Hummel, and Henri E. Bal. An efficient reliable broadcast protocol Operating Systems Review , 23(4):5-19, October 1989. Nikos Kaburlasos. Hardware support for garbage collection in the C programming language . Master's thesis, University of Texas at Austin, 1992. Ted Kaehler and Glenn Krasner. LOOM - large object-oriented memory for Smalltalk-80 systems . In Krasner [Smalltalk-BHWA] , pages 251-271. Ted Kaehler. Virtual memory for an object-oriented language Byte , 6(8):378-387, August 1981.

    55. Scholarly Spaces 6 - Scholarly Practices
    a mixture of metaphors musical scores, playscripts, eventdriven programming, sprites is of interactive scripting systems like Kaleida's scriptx or General
    http://www.lcc.gatech.edu/~xinwei/papers/texts/scholarspaces/6.Survey.html
    [PREVIOUS] [FIRST]
    VI. Appendix: Technology Survey
    What is in the future? I cannot be exhaustive here, for lack of time and knowledge, but I'll try to spread my net widely enough to catch general purpose systems of potential interest to scholars at Stanford. Please note that this telescoped survey contains no recommendation of particular technologies.
    VI.B. Schematics
    I summarize my judgment of user and development environments in the following two figures. I plot quality vs. time in a highly schematic fashion, with no empirically quantified metric.
    The quality of the user environment is a product of expressivity, transparency and power. This is largely a function of the shrink-wrap applications and in particular cases, researchware or instructional software written by peers or experts.
    Figure 2. User Environments. The quality of a development environment is a product of the expressivity, power, and human as well as computer efficiency. In this context, we need to weigh how much we can multiply staff productivity by the power of the development environment.
    Figure 3. Developer Environments.

    56. OOP Lang S
    Oriented programming System. TI, 1986. Multiple inheritance, class variables. Ftpftp//altdorf.ai.mit.edu/archive/schemelibrary/unsupported/CScheme.scriptx
    http://swiki.hfbk-hamburg.de:8888/MusicTechnology/43
    OOP Lang S
    Back to OOP Languages
    OOP Lang S
    Sather
    ("Say-ther", named for the Sather Tower at UCB, as opposed to the
    Eiffel Tower) Steve M. Omohundro, ICSI, Berkeley 1991. Interactive
    object-oriented language with simple syntax, similar to Eiffel, but non-
    proprietary and faster. Sather 0.2 was nearly a subset of Eiffel 2.0, but
    Sather 1.0 adds many distinctive features. Parameterized classes, multiple
    inheritance, statically-checked strong typing, garbage collection.
    Generates C as an intermediate language. Versions for most workstations.
    (See dpSather, pSather, Sather-K).
    Ftp: ftp://ftp.icsi.berkeley.edu/pub/sather
    Info: sather-admin@icsi.berkeley.edu
    List: sather@icsi.berkeley.edu
    Sather-K
    Karlsruhe Sather. A sublanguage of Sather used for introductory courses in object-oriented design and typesafe programming.
    Info: trapp@karlsruhe.gmd.de
    SCOOP
    Structured Concurrent Object-Oriented Prolog. "SCOOP, Structured Concurrent Object-Oriented Prolog", J. Vaucher et al, in ECOOP '88, S. Gjessing et al eds, LNCS 322, Springer 1988, pp.191-211.
    SCOOPS
    Scheme Object-Oriented Programming System. TI, 1986. Multiple

    57. CyberNautical Almanach
    Functional programming Applications; OPAL Project. HyperText and HyperMedia WWWActivity at Kaleida Labs scriptx. Music the Alf Midi Site; MIDI Home Page; MIDI
    http://www.csi.uottawa.ca/~dduchier/cyber.html
    CyberNautical Almanach
    Agents
    Algorithm Animation
    Artificial Intelligence
    Artificial Life
    Bibliographies
    Books
    Constraint Satisfaction
    Computer Supported Cooperative Work CSCW
    Courses Online

    58. Red Rock Eater Digest - Digital Media Perspective
    Kaleida's scriptx It's late but ahead of its time Inside the Current Issue a completereport on the Time Warner network, technology and programming, see the
    http://commons.somewhere.com/rre/1994/Digital.Media.Perspectiv.html
    Red Rock Eater Digest Most Recent Article: Sat, 8 Feb 2003
    Digital Media Perspective
    Date: Fri, 23 Dec 1994 12:25:42 -0800 From: perspective@digmedia.com Subject: Digital Media Perspective 94.12.23 This newsletter should be viewed with a monospaced typeface such as Courier or Monaco DIGITAL MEDIA PERSPECTIVE December 23, 1994 Table of Contents Editorial: A Red Line in Cyberspace? The Top Ten digital media events of 1994 Sexist Netiquette Cable customer service: Is it ready for interactivity? Kaleida's ScriptX: It's late but ahead of its time Inside the Current Issue of Digital Media: A Seybold Report The Top Ten digital media events of 1994 by Digital Media staff This was the year that was; one in the long march toward a different, digital environment. No individual event signaled the transition from an analog to a digital reality, but the ten we chose do point to a decisive fragmentation of the old economy. Battle lines were drawn and long-standing assumptions about the Way Things Work collapsed weekly throughout 1994. In 1995, we think you'll see these stories, presented in no particular order, have a major impact on the development of electronic markets. DIRECT BROADCAST SATELLITE DEBUTS Consumers can't get their hands on these pizza-size dishes fast enough. Retailers report that they've already sold nearly 400,000 RCA and Hughes dishes, at around $800 a pop. On top of that steep entry price, subscribers must pay a monthly service fee ($30) for up to 150 channels and for pay-per-view events. The message is clear: People want control of their viewing choices and are sick of the cable companies' steep prices for relatively limited service.

    59. Jan 99 Viewpoint
    HyperCard introduced programming for the rest of us. Ironically, while Apple hasspent millions on sinceabandoned efforts like Dylan and scriptx, their most
    http://www.mactech.com/articles/mactech/Vol.15/15.01/Jan99Viewpoint/

    About MacTech
    Home Page Subscribe to MacTech! ... Webmaster Feedback Volume Number: 15
    Issue Number: 1
    Column Tag: Viewpoint
    Jan 99 Viewpoint
    by Richard Gaskin As Mac OS development tools continue to evolve, there is one important category which is often overlooked in the Mac community: rapid application development (RAD). The availability of robust RAD tools for Windows, most notably Visual Basic, is arguably one of the primary contributors to the plethora of new applications written for the Wintel platform, and absolutely critical to the entrenchment of Wintel in corporate and academic environments where custom applications need to be cranked out regularly. RAD tools represent a critical component of Mac evangelism as well, allowing opportunities for organizations to create custom solutions which fill market niches and keep folks using Macs. Apple has been proudly citing the number of new applications for Mac OS since the announcement of the iMac, but it seems a fair bet that this number would at least double if the company took a more active role in popularizing RAD tools for Mac OS. http://www.scriptics.com/people/john.ousterhout/scripting.html

    60. KALEIDA LABS' NEW CEO MICHAEL BRAUN LOOKS AHEAD AT INTERACTIVE TV
    will be able to create highend interactive media programs with scriptx. These serverswill store and distribute interactive TV programming to the set-top box
    http://www.redherring.com/mag/issue05/new.html
    MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_home_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_tech_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_vc_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_investor_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_archive_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_conferences_on.gif') Gainers Millennium Pharm Advanced Micro Devices Tpsa Telekom Polska
    Decliners Silverline Technologies Orascom Telecom Holding Net One Systems Co
    KALEIDA LABS' NEW CEO MICHAEL BRAUN LOOKS AHEAD AT INTERACTIVE TV
    By Red Herring
    From October 1993 issue
    Kaleida Labs, Inc. is a joint venture of Apple Computer and IBM founded in May of 1992 to develop and license an open software standard for multimedia development and playback. In July 1993, the company announced that it had replaced founding CEO, Nat Goldhaber, with 20-year IBM veteran, Michael Braun. Mr. Goldhaber's sudden departure has left industry watchers wondering if the company was in serious trouble, or whether Mr. Braun's was recruited to merely navigate the company's next phase of development. The Herring checked in with Kaleida's new CEO for an update on the company's progress, and to discuss its plans to participate in the interactive TV revolution.

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