

FileMaker became a cross-platform app with Mac and Windows versions in 1992. Noashoba had three major revisions of FileMaker before the company was acquired by Apple to become part of its Claris* software division in 1986, at which point the software was renamed FileMaker II.

Two years later Microsoft discontinued its program. FileMaker went head-to-head with Microsoft File, then the dominant database app on the Mac, and within a year it matched its sales. FileMaker Pro is a cross-platform (Mac OS and Windows) relational database (RDBMS) application published by Apple subsidiary FileMaker Inc.īorn at Nashoba Systems, Concord, MA, in the early 1980s as Nutshell, a DOS-based database, it was adapted to the Macintosh with a graphical user interface in 1985.
