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{{Short description|Word processing software}} {{Infobox software | name = MultiMate | logo = <!-- Image name is enough --> | logo alt = | screenshot = <!-- Image name is enough --> | caption = | screenshot alt = | collapsible = | author = | developer = Multimate International | released = {{Start date and age|1982|12}} | discontinued = | latest release version = | latest release date = <!-- {{Start date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|df=yes/no}} --> | latest preview version = | latest preview date = <!-- {{Start date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|df=yes/no}} --> | programming language = | operating system = | platform = [[MS-DOS]] | size = | language = | language count = <!-- Number only --> | language footnote = | genre = [[Word processor]] | license = | alexa = | website = <!--{{URL|example.org}}--> | standard = | AsOf = }} '''MultiMate''' was a [[word processor]] developed by [[Multimate International]] for [[IBM PC]] [[MS-DOS]] computers in the early 1980s. ==History== With 1,000 computers, [[Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance]] was one of the first large-volume customers for the [[IBM PC]].<ref name="strothman198208">{{cite news | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WYnHD9WSWdAC&q=%22pc%20magazine%22%20%22october%201982%22&pg=PA44 | title=The More PCs the Merrier | work=PC Magazine | date=August 1982 | access-date=21 October 2013 | author=Strothman, Jim | page=44}}</ref> It hired W. H. Jones & Associates to write word-processing software for the computer that would not require retraining its employees, already familiar with [[Wang word processors]].{{r|sandler198302}} W. H. Jones' head Will Jones and five other developers created the software.{{r|garvey19840306}} W. H. Jones retained the right to sell the program elsewhere, and WordMate appeared in December 1982. The company renamed itself to SoftWord Systems, then Multimate International, while renaming WordMate to MultiMate.<ref name="puotinen198411">{{cite news | url=https://archive.org/stream/byte-magazine-1984-11/1984_11_BYTE_09-12_New_Chips#page/n285/mode/2up | title=Leading Edge and MultiMate | work=BYTE | date=November 1984 | access-date=23 October 2013 | author=Puotinen, C J | page=287 | type=review}}</ref> Advertisements stated that MultiMate "mimic[ked] the features and functions of a dedicated system",<ref name="pc19840124">{{Cite news |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kSzKzjWHeVEC&pg=PA51 |title=MultiMate: The Word Processor You've Been Dreaming Of |date=1984-01-24 |work=PC Magazine |access-date=23 October 2013 |page=51 |type=advertisement}}</ref> and that it was "modeled after the Wang word processor".<ref name="pc19840904">{{cite news | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vQDibG12bVcC&pg=PA108 | title=Exploding The Big Wang Theory. | work=PC Magazine | date=1984-09-04 | access-date=25 October 2013 | page=108 | type=advertisement}}</ref> Like Connecticut Mutual, many customers purchased it because of the similarity with the Wang system.{{r|garvey19840306}} MultiMate was not marketed heavily to end-users, but was quickly popular with insurance companies, law firms, other business computer users and US government agencies and the military. While the Wang WP keyboard differs from the original PC keyboard, MultiMate compensated by providing a large plastic template that clips on the PC keyboard, and stick-on labels for the fronts of the PC keys. The template and labels color-code the combination keystrokes using the SHIFT, ALT and CTRL keys with all 10 of the PC's [[function keys]] and many of the character keys. Like Wang systems, MultiMate controls most editing operations with function keys, assigning four functions to each of the 10 function keys, which [[IBM]] initially located at the left side of the keyboard in two vertical rows. It also provides a "document summary" screen for each document, another Wang feature, which allows more sophisticated document-management than the brief file names allowed by [[MS-DOS]] and [[PC DOS]]. As function selection through key-controlled [[Drop-down list|screen-top drop-down menus]] was popularized by other programs, MultiMate added menus. MultiMate's popularity rapidly grew. In January 1983 some employees were paid late because of slow sales, but two months later revenue grew 25-fold after good reviews appeared in magazines. The company's fiscal 1984 sales were $15 million or more,<ref name="garvey19840306">{{cite news | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZhoP0KRkQe4C&pg=PA59 | title=MultiMate Word Processor Slows Down in New Version 3.20 | work=PC Magazine | date=1984-03-06 | access-date=24 October 2013 | author=Garvey, Ian | page=59}}</ref> and by early 1985 MultiMate's [[installed base]] in companies was as large as former market leader [[WordStar]]'s.<ref name="iw19850415">{{cite news | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zC4EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA20 | title=Micropro Fights for Office Market | work=InfoWorld | date=1985-04-15 | access-date=4 February 2015 | pages=20–21}}</ref> Jones sold the company to [[Ashton-Tate]] in December 1985<ref>{{cite web|url=http://corphist.computerhistory.org/corphist/documents/doc-446a2847676be.pdf|title=MultiMate Products|publisher=Ashton-Tate|date=1 April 1986}}</ref> for about $20 million.<ref>"Ashton-Tate Plans to Acquire Multimate In Bid to Strengthen Software Position" By JOHN MARCOM JR., The Wall Street Journal; Jul 30, 1985; pg. 4</ref> An Ashton-Tate press release called the acquisition "the largest ever in the microcomputer software industry".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://corphist.computerhistory.org/corphist/view.php?s=documents&id=525|title=Complete Multimate Acquisition|last=Block|first=Norman|year=1985}}</ref> Other MultiMate products included foreign language versions of the software (e.g., "MultiTexto" in [[Spanish language|Spanish]]), a hardware interface card for file-transfer with Wang systems, a keyboard with extra function keys, and versions of MultiMate for different [[PC clone]] MS-DOS computers and PC networks from [[Novell]], [[3COM]] and IBM ([[Token Ring]]). Early attempts to create a MultiMate Data Manager and List Manager in-house never reached the market. Multimate International developed the core word processing software and utilities (file conversion, printer drivers), but purchased and adapted sub-programs for spelling and grammar checking, list management, outlining and print-time incorporation of graphics in word processing documents (MultiMate GraphLink). In addition to rebranding such externally developed programs, Multimate rewrote the documentation for each program and adapted the program interfaces to more closely resemble the word processor. The last version of MultiMate was packaged with many of these add-on programs under the product name "MultiMate Advantage" to compete with other word processor software, especially [[IBM DisplayWrite]] for DOS—which Multimate International developers saw as their main competition in the business market—and to a lesser extent [[WordPerfect]], the DOS incarnation of [[Microsoft Word]], and the [[Samna]] word processor, which had its roots in another office word processing computer. One of the first "clone" versions of MultiMate was bundled with an early portable PC made by Corona. Other versions were written to match PCs by [[Radio Shack]], [[Texas Instruments]], [[Toshiba]], the early [[GRiD Systems Corporation|Grid laptop]] and the [[IBM PC Junior]]. The detailed MultiMate word processor documentation, which quickly grew to three volumes, gives the product a solid "office product" feel, using high-quality paper with its main reference section presented in a padded binder with fold-out easel. (A company legend was that the MultiMate user manual was written first, by an experienced Wang WP manager, then the programmers were told to write software to match it, which is how the Wang WP was created.) Early releases of MultiMate gave users unlimited access to a toll-free support number and a promise of low-cost upgrades, which contributed to its dedicated user population. Support policies later were brought in line with Ashton-Tate's standard practices. MultiMate supports a variety of PC clones and hundreds of computer printers, each of which requires its own printer driver. The company's printer support is very strong with [[daisy-wheel]] and [[dot-matrix printer]]s, but less so with [[PostScript]] [[fonts]] and [[laser printer]]s. Ashton-Tate never released a [[Microsoft Windows|Windows]] version. It discontinued MultiMate's development efforts on [[OpenVMS|VMS]] and [[Unix]] platforms and closed a development group in [[Dublin]], [[Ireland]]. The product was dropped after the Ashton-Tate itself was purchased by [[Borland]]. ==Reception== ''[[PC Magazine]]'' in February 1983 stated that MultiMate "virtually remakes your computer into a Wang-like dedicated word processor", and that it was "very fast, easy to learn, and capable" with many features. The review noted the application's inability to use more than 128K of RAM, but praised the documentation and built-in help, and stated that many commands required half the keystrokes of the WordStar equivalent. The review concluded "MultiMate stands head and shoulders above many if not most [IBM PC word processors] ... an impressive entrant".<ref name="sandler198302">{{cite news | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7wCiNAUEuAMC&pg=PA233 | title=The Dedication of Multimate | work=PC Magazine | date=February 1983 | access-date=21 October 2013 | author=Sandler, Corey | page=233}}</ref> The magazine reported in March 1984 that version 3.2 was noticeably slower than 3.11, which the company attributed to additional safeguarding of data.{{r|garvey19840306}} ''[[BYTE]]'' in November 1984 was less positive. When evaluating MultiMate 3.11 and [[Leading Edge Word Processor]], the magazine cited "irritating inconsistencies" in 3.11's user interface and documentation, a bug that "can wreck your files", and other flaws. The reviewer, an author of books on MultiMate and WordStar, concluded that both MultiMate and Leading Edge Word Processor were easy for novices to learn and had many features to avoid loss of data, but unsuitable for complex projects because of "hard to decipher, awkward, and sometimes dangerous" procedures.{{r|puotinen198411}} A separate review in the magazine described version 3.20 as being "very safe" because of many backups and safeguards and praised the formatting features, customization ability, and quality of the (very busy) toll-free help line. The review called MultiMate "the klunkiest package" of five tested word processors, because of the overemphasis on safety, criticized the built-in help and slow performance, and reported being unable to use the spell checker because of its poor quality. The reviewer mentioned that MultiMate version 3.30 was already shipping when the article went to press.<ref name="cameron1984pc">{{Cite magazine |last=Cameron |first=Janet |date=Fall 1984 |title=Word Processing Revisited |url=https://archive.org/stream/byte-magazine-1984-09/1984_09_BYTE_09-09_Guide_to_the_IBM_PCs#page/n171/mode/2up |access-date=23 October 2013 |magazine=BYTE |page=171}}</ref> "Multimate Advantage II "has finally caught up with mainstream microprocessor word processing programs", ''[[InfoWorld]]'' said in July 1987. The magazine approved of its mail merge abilities, printer support, and documentation, but criticized its pagination, lack of indexing, and inability to handle documents larger than 128K. ''InfoWorld'' concluded that MultiMate was "a very good product, and much improved over its earlier versions", below WordPerfect in functionality, but equal to Samna IV and superior to Officewriter 5.<ref name="lombardi19870713">{{Cite magazine |last=Lombardi |first=John |date=1987-07-13 |title=Word Processing Upgrade Adds Power, Features |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xzAEAAAAMBAJ&pg=RA1-PA55#v=onepage&q&f=false |access-date=2025-05-01 |magazine=Infoworld |pages=55-57 |volume=9 |issue=28}}</ref> A 1990 [[American Institute of Certified Public Accountants]] member survey found that 5% of respondents used MultiMate as their word processor.<ref name="aicpa1990">{{Cite report |url=https://egrove.olemiss.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1563&context=aicpa_guides |title=1990 AICPA survey of computer usage |author-link=American Institute of Certified Public Accountants |year=1990 |id=561 |access-date=2025-04-30}}</ref> == References == {{Reflist|30em}} == See also == * [[List of word processors]] {{Word processors}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Multimate}} [[Category:1982 software]] [[Category:DOS software]] [[Category:Word processors]]
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