A history of Windowlight
I've been collecting a few links from the very early days of, well, me, on the internet. This is so I don't forget what happened and when, as I approach my seventies:)
Lucky there's the internet archive, the Wayback Machine, which has kept tabs on me going back to 1996. So that's 27 years I've been dabbling on some site somewhere. First up was the site I made for my work, Target Copy Centre in Northlands Mall:
http://web.archive.org/web/199701152308 ... ycent.html
Target.co.nz was a lot of fun, but I have no idea how effective it was reaching customers -- it certainly didn't take the world by storm.
As a sideline to Target in 1999 I used my free website offer from Ihug and started OnTarget, which was mainly a Microsoft Publisher tutorial site, after I was given MVP status by Microsoft because of my work on the Microsoft newsgroups back when they were a thing.
http://web.archive.org/web/199910050439 ... /~robcorn/
It was probably the end of 2001 when the OnTarget site pivoted to flightsim. One of the perks of the MVP Program was being able to buy anything in the MS store for a fraction of the retail price, with a yearly credit which never seemed to run out. I ended up buying all the games just because it didn't cost me anything, and one of them was MFS, version -- umm.... 2000, I guess. It was really FS2002 which got me interested in making scenery, because it came with Gmax. This was new to most simmers, and I started out just offering hints on how to use it, hoping that locals throughout NZ would make me some nice scenery.
http://web.archive.org/web/200202050356 ... htsim.html
By week 27(?) -- I know that because the webpage is called that -- I had become pretty obsessed which the sim, summed up here:
http://web.archive.org/web/200208090652 ... eek27.html
By 2004, there was a new-look Windowlight home page, I don't remember that one, but I kind of like it. The news story here has me taking my computer to the Wigram open day, and letting people try the sim. Back then we had 'kiosk mode', where they could fly but not mess with anything.
http://web.archive.org/web/200404101310 ... /index.htm
Another design change in 2005, quite ugly this time. These were the days of the Godzone Magazine.
http://web.archive.org/web/200503050852 ... /index.htm
Yet another redesign in 2006, I remember the hei matau, representing the 'G' of 'Godzone'.
http://web.archive.org/web/200607031254 ... /index.htm
I'll always have Windowlight.co.nz, if only to keep getting my email:) The whole thing started as a joke, my partner back then was thinking of starting a business, but was worried that people would not accept her because of her accent. I said she should make a feature of any perceived limitation, and call her business 'Herbal Accent.' I had just imported a 1MP digital camera, costing $2500, and thought about using it to take catalogue photos for my copy centre customers, but as it didn't have anywhere to plug in a flash unit, I told my partner that I should call the business 'Windowlight', as in 'Photography by Windowlight', because there was no other option. When it came to get my own domain name, I went with Windowlight, and here we are, at the far end of a rather uninspiring career!!:)
Lucky there's the internet archive, the Wayback Machine, which has kept tabs on me going back to 1996. So that's 27 years I've been dabbling on some site somewhere. First up was the site I made for my work, Target Copy Centre in Northlands Mall:
http://web.archive.org/web/199701152308 ... ycent.html
Target.co.nz was a lot of fun, but I have no idea how effective it was reaching customers -- it certainly didn't take the world by storm.
As a sideline to Target in 1999 I used my free website offer from Ihug and started OnTarget, which was mainly a Microsoft Publisher tutorial site, after I was given MVP status by Microsoft because of my work on the Microsoft newsgroups back when they were a thing.
http://web.archive.org/web/199910050439 ... /~robcorn/
It was probably the end of 2001 when the OnTarget site pivoted to flightsim. One of the perks of the MVP Program was being able to buy anything in the MS store for a fraction of the retail price, with a yearly credit which never seemed to run out. I ended up buying all the games just because it didn't cost me anything, and one of them was MFS, version -- umm.... 2000, I guess. It was really FS2002 which got me interested in making scenery, because it came with Gmax. This was new to most simmers, and I started out just offering hints on how to use it, hoping that locals throughout NZ would make me some nice scenery.
http://web.archive.org/web/200202050356 ... htsim.html
By week 27(?) -- I know that because the webpage is called that -- I had become pretty obsessed which the sim, summed up here:
http://web.archive.org/web/200208090652 ... eek27.html
By 2004, there was a new-look Windowlight home page, I don't remember that one, but I kind of like it. The news story here has me taking my computer to the Wigram open day, and letting people try the sim. Back then we had 'kiosk mode', where they could fly but not mess with anything.
http://web.archive.org/web/200404101310 ... /index.htm
Another design change in 2005, quite ugly this time. These were the days of the Godzone Magazine.
http://web.archive.org/web/200503050852 ... /index.htm
Yet another redesign in 2006, I remember the hei matau, representing the 'G' of 'Godzone'.
http://web.archive.org/web/200607031254 ... /index.htm
I'll always have Windowlight.co.nz, if only to keep getting my email:) The whole thing started as a joke, my partner back then was thinking of starting a business, but was worried that people would not accept her because of her accent. I said she should make a feature of any perceived limitation, and call her business 'Herbal Accent.' I had just imported a 1MP digital camera, costing $2500, and thought about using it to take catalogue photos for my copy centre customers, but as it didn't have anywhere to plug in a flash unit, I told my partner that I should call the business 'Windowlight', as in 'Photography by Windowlight', because there was no other option. When it came to get my own domain name, I went with Windowlight, and here we are, at the far end of a rather uninspiring career!!:)