Peter Nolan writes about Metaphor Computer Systems from the listserv at datawarehousing.com. If you have information about this company or its products you can add that to a wiki page at MetaphorComputingSystems. Endorsements for simple systems like this should be an inspiration to developers. I'm not sure if Meta5 is all or a subset of the original product.
If I said M3 it was a typo...Metaphor Computer Systems (M4) was
founded in the early 80s (might have been 1982) and released a product
called Data Interpretation System (DIS) in 1984 if my memory serves
correctly. Ralph Kimball was one of the co-founders.
I'm not sure there are many places where 'the history of Metaphor'
is documented. I wish there was, it was quite a company. In 1997 I
got the opportunity to personally say thanks to Ralph for his part in
M4 because it changed the direction I was heading in.
In 1991 I had one of those 'ah-ha' moments when I saw DIS demonstrated
to a customer of mine. As I watched it took about 5 minutes to
realise that what I was seeing was the way end user computing was
'meant to be'. I was completely 'sold' on DIS as 'the way' data
analysis/analytical applications would be built in the future. So was
the customer. They bought the product.
In another one of those industry 'if-onlys'. If only IBM knew what
they had it could have been the office desktop we all use today. (IBM
bought Metaphor in 1988. So in 1988 IBM owned an 'office desktop' far
superior to MS Office which would not exist for a few years
yet. Instead of pushing DIS they pushed Office Vision, which died.)
The list of features in DIS was endless. The folks at M4 broke so
much new ground. They had some 400+ customers by 1993 and their
customers were household names.
I wish there were some demos or screen shots still around to
explain to people what it could do.
The most important thing about DIS was that the IT staff were no
longer required to develop analytical applications. The biggest
benefit of this was that the business users did not need to
'externalise' or 'communicate' their requirements to anyone. Working
on the DIS desktop they could try out their ideas and if they turned
out to be good they could be 'packaged' into an analytical app. Yes,
I am talking 1986 here. And, as per my previous comment, the
'intellectual capital' of the analyst to who created the application
was captured with the application to a very significant extent because
any other business analyst could read it. They barely needed any
training to be able to read even a quite complex application.
One time an actuary customer of mine borrowed the manuals and from
scratch, with no training and no help from anyone else, wrote a 30
year death experience analysis application in 3 weeks. It was that
easy and that good to use DIS.
DIS was 'so cool' you didn't even need a keyboard. We used to put
out keyboards on top of the screens and they would stay there for
weeks on end. Try writing an analytical app today without a
keyboard!!!!
Unfortunately, at the time IBM bought Metaphor the future of the
world was PS/2, OS/2, MicroChannel, 8514A graphics adapters and Token
Ring (at least according to IBM). When moving the software from
proprietary to IBM hardware, IBM specified ONLY IBM hardware. There
were a lot of other reasons why Metaphor experienced trouble operating
inside IBM. (They were not the only ones, who remembers 'Rolm'
telephones today?)
DIS was all 32 bit and it was the first fully 32 bit app that was
released on OS/2, but OS/2 was 'doomed' and by the time windows 95
came out the opportunity to get DIS out into the marketplace had
pretty much gone away and MS Office had a stranglehold on the windows
3.1 desktop.
Eventually the product was stabilised and then finally withdrawn
from marketing. I think that was around 1997/8.
But there are many of us out there who look at what we could do
then and what we can do today and wonder how it can be that there is
so much that is still so hard to do now that was so easy then. Call
me nostaligic!!! ;-)