Bruno Delean, creator of FITS (functional interpolation transformational system) technology, and the innovative software package Live Picture. FITS: how it works
FlashPix is a format for digital image storage developed by Eastman Kodak Company in collaboration with Hewlett-Packard Company, Live Picture, Inc., and Microsoft Corporation. FlashPix image files contain multiple resolution images along with transformation information to insure the best display on the viewing hardware.
MacPaint (MAC) Format - MacPaint (MAC): These Macintosh Paint files are commonly used for monochrome clip art. MacPaint (3k), usually suffixed .MAC, is the format used by the original black and white Macintosh paint program. Two colors only, 576x720 resolution only.
A file format developed by Apple Computer in 1984. PICT files are encoded in QuickDraw commands and can hold both object-oriented images and bit-mapped images. It is supported by all graphics programs that run on Macintosh computers. The original PICT format supported 8 colors. Modern versions of PICT, including PICT2, support 32-bit color (more than 16 million colors)
QuickTime 7, features 3GPP and 3GPP2, H.264 worldwide standards for the creation, delivery, and playback of multimedia over new, high-speed wireless networks. Built on MPEG-4 and powered by QuickTime, 3GPP and 3GPP2 extend the reach of rich multimedia to a new generation of handheld wireless devices. As the first widely distributed, freely available multimedia technology to deliver both 3GPP and 3GPP2 capabilities, QuickTime enables users all over the world to share 3G content with others via both computers and mobile devices