Publishers
Publisher Information and Releases
Questor (Imagineering)
Australia
Australian manufacturer and distributor of budget re-releases and compilations.
Questor, IIRC, was Imagineering's (the large software distributor, not to be confused with the software company) games label.
Questor on (02)662 7944
Imagineering's entertainment division, Questor, has secured a number of new major publishers of software. Ready- soft, from Canada, will be distributing Dragon's Lair through Questor, a game tagged as the Amiga hit of 1988. We are yet to sec this program. Other titles on the way from the same crowd include Ror.k Challenge, Scary Mutant, Space Aliens from Mars and Cosmic Bunker.
Another big boy signed up by the lads at Questor is Elite one of the largest
and best known companies of the U.K.
Titles they have released in past days include Space Harrier and Paper Boy.
Compilations of their previous hits will be on sale at this time.
Wide World Of Sports was a hugely popular Sunday TV sports programme at the time.
I guess Questor figured they could sell more with a major endorsment from them.
"Wide World Of Sports" was released in Australia by Questor in 1989/90 for PC, Amiga and C64.
The C64 version has 18 games in total from the various Epyx Games.
Imagineering was a software distribution company founded by Jodee Rich in the early 1980s.
It grew rapidly before running into financial trouble in the late 1980s.
Imagineering was sold to First Pacific in 1990 at which time Jodee Rich left the business.
Graham Pickles, managing director of sister company Tech Pacific, took the helm of the group and merged the two businesses together under the Tech Pacific banner in 1990.
The company was most famous for distributing the following product ranges:
Lotus Software
Ashton-Tate
AST
Wyse
Control Data (Storage Products only)
Mountain Computer
Seagate
3Com
Intel
NetComm
In addition, the company maintained a factory in Taipei, Taiwan, where it manufactured its own line of Personal computers under the "Ultra By Imagineering" brandname. The majority of these were based on components manufactured by DTC computer. These machines proved very popular with home and small business users in Australia and New Zealand, because of their low entry price, the availability of telephone support and full service in case of failure. A rough chronology of the Ultra product family was:
Mid 1987: The original Ultra XT was created by Tony Ianuzzelli. It used a 6 MHz 8088 CPU, was supplied with 640KB of RAM, a single 5.25" floppy diskette drive, CGA graphics and an optional 20Mb hard disk drive.
June 1988: The second generation Ultra XT was created by Lindsay Vagg. CPU speed was now 8 MHz, and an EGA display was available.
December 1988: Chris Moran and Carlo Incorvia created the Ultra AT. A "Baby-AT" chassis with 10 MHz 80286 CPU, 1MB RAM, EGA or VGA graphics (using Twinhead company cards). All models had either 20 or 40MB half-height hard drives.
June 1989: Chris Moran created the second generation Ultra AT. CPU Speed increased to 12 MHz, and 80 - 141MB hard drive options were offered.
November 1989: The MyPC, basically an Ultra XT using cut-price components and secondhand CPUs in brightly coloured chassis, was released for sale through Grace Brothers and Myer stores at Christmas.
Other machines were developed, but never released for sale. These included:
The Ultra 386. This was eventually replaced by an OEM Intel 80386 system.
The Ultra SX. Using an 80386SX motherboard in the Ultra AT chassis.
Gallileo: A high-end server for 3Com networks, using a 25 MHz 80386 processor and up to 2 141MB SCSI Hard Drives
Questor, IIRC, was Imagineering's (the large software distributor, not to be confused with the software company) games label.
Questor on (02)662 7944
Imagineering's entertainment division, Questor, has secured a number of new major publishers of software. Ready- soft, from Canada, will be distributing Dragon's Lair through Questor, a game tagged as the Amiga hit of 1988. We are yet to sec this program. Other titles on the way from the same crowd include Ror.k Challenge, Scary Mutant, Space Aliens from Mars and Cosmic Bunker.
Another big boy signed up by the lads at Questor is Elite one of the largest
and best known companies of the U.K.
Titles they have released in past days include Space Harrier and Paper Boy.
Compilations of their previous hits will be on sale at this time.
Wide World Of Sports was a hugely popular Sunday TV sports programme at the time.
I guess Questor figured they could sell more with a major endorsment from them.
"Wide World Of Sports" was released in Australia by Questor in 1989/90 for PC, Amiga and C64.
The C64 version has 18 games in total from the various Epyx Games.
Imagineering was a software distribution company founded by Jodee Rich in the early 1980s.
It grew rapidly before running into financial trouble in the late 1980s.
Imagineering was sold to First Pacific in 1990 at which time Jodee Rich left the business.
Graham Pickles, managing director of sister company Tech Pacific, took the helm of the group and merged the two businesses together under the Tech Pacific banner in 1990.
The company was most famous for distributing the following product ranges:
Lotus Software
Ashton-Tate
AST
Wyse
Control Data (Storage Products only)
Mountain Computer
Seagate
3Com
Intel
NetComm
In addition, the company maintained a factory in Taipei, Taiwan, where it manufactured its own line of Personal computers under the "Ultra By Imagineering" brandname. The majority of these were based on components manufactured by DTC computer. These machines proved very popular with home and small business users in Australia and New Zealand, because of their low entry price, the availability of telephone support and full service in case of failure. A rough chronology of the Ultra product family was:
Mid 1987: The original Ultra XT was created by Tony Ianuzzelli. It used a 6 MHz 8088 CPU, was supplied with 640KB of RAM, a single 5.25" floppy diskette drive, CGA graphics and an optional 20Mb hard disk drive.
June 1988: The second generation Ultra XT was created by Lindsay Vagg. CPU speed was now 8 MHz, and an EGA display was available.
December 1988: Chris Moran and Carlo Incorvia created the Ultra AT. A "Baby-AT" chassis with 10 MHz 80286 CPU, 1MB RAM, EGA or VGA graphics (using Twinhead company cards). All models had either 20 or 40MB half-height hard drives.
June 1989: Chris Moran created the second generation Ultra AT. CPU Speed increased to 12 MHz, and 80 - 141MB hard drive options were offered.
November 1989: The MyPC, basically an Ultra XT using cut-price components and secondhand CPUs in brightly coloured chassis, was released for sale through Grace Brothers and Myer stores at Christmas.
Other machines were developed, but never released for sale. These included:
The Ultra 386. This was eventually replaced by an OEM Intel 80386 system.
The Ultra SX. Using an 80386SX motherboard in the Ultra AT chassis.
Gallileo: A high-end server for 3Com networks, using a 25 MHz 80386 processor and up to 2 141MB SCSI Hard Drives