Willow Peripherals

{{Short description|Former American computer hardware company based in New York City}}

{{Infobox company

| name=Willow Peripherals, Inc.

| founders={{ubl|Jonathan Vail|Bill Bares|Valerie Gardner|Calvin Berger|Howard Alexander}}

| founded={{start date|1984}} in Manhattan, New York, United States

| defunct={{end date and age|2004}}

| fate=Dissolution

| hq_location=Port Morris, New York, United States

| num_employees=25 (1992)

}}

Willow Peripherals, Inc., was an American computer hardware company active from 1986 to 2004 and based in New York City. The company was well known for their frame grabber and television output adapter cards for the IBM Personal Computer and adapters.{{cite journal | last=Gardner | first=Valerie | date=February 1990 | url=https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A8808783/GPS?sid=wikipedia | title=Willow predicting a small revolution in computer design | journal=Computer Pictures | publisher= Access Intelligence | volume=8 | issue=2 | page=47 | via=Gale}} Willow was based in Port Morris in the South Bronx for most of its existence.

History

Willow Peripherals was originally incorporated in Manhattan in 1984 by founders Jonathan Vail, Bill Bares, Valerie Gardner, Calvin Berger and Howard Alexander.{{cite journal | last=Carlson | first=Eugene | date=August 12, 1993 | url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/398337346/ | title=South Bronx Address Can Give a Firm Reverse Cachet | journal=The Wall Street Journal | publisher=Dow Jones & Company | page=B2 | via=ProQuest}}{{cite book | date=1999 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fccqAQAAMAAJ | title=High Technology Market Place Directory | publisher=Princeton Hightech Group | page=886 | via=Google Books}} The company's first products were generic expansion cards and peripherals for the IBM Personal Computer.

In 1986, the company moved to Port Morris in the South Bronx and began developing video-related products for the IBM PC shortly afterward.{{cite journal | last=Sherwin | first=Richard | date=June 6, 1989 | url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/daily-news-small-biz-big-ambitions/129256157/ | title=Small biz, big ambitions | journal=New York Daily News | page=MP3 | via=Newspapers.com}} The company leased an 8,100-square-foot facility in Port Morris for a bargain $2 per square foot, a rate that barely grew in the decade that followed. The company however suffered from a lack of employees interested in working for the company, owing to the South Bronx's contemporary reputation for crime and urban decay.{{cite journal | last=Lohr | first=Steve | date=October 12, 1992 | url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/428710312/ | title=New York a Hard Town for High-Tech | journal=The New York Times | page=D1 | via=ProQuest}} Between October 1992 and September 1993, the company's workforce dwindled from 25 workers to only 10.{{cite journal | last=Ditlea | first=Steve | date=September 13, 1993 | url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/daily-news-facing-technical-difficulties/129256135/ | title=Facing technical difficulties: Willow Peripherals beats odds in Bronx | journal=New York Daily News | page=24 | via=Newspapers.com}} {{ProQuest|390835437}}. Manufacturing of Willow's products was originally done out of their Bronx headquarters, but owing to increasing restrictions on environmental safeguards in New York in the early 1990s, production was outsourced to a factory in Pennsylvania.

The company's first video-related product was the Publishers' VGA, a frame grabber expansion card, released in September 1988.{{cite journal | last=Webster | first=John | date=September 26, 1988 | url=https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A7026093/GPS?sid=wikipedia | title=VGA-compatible hardware makers seek ways to pull ahead of the pack | journal=PC Week | publisher=Ziff-Davis | volume=5 | issue=39 | page=112 | via=Gale}}{{cite journal | last=Fram | first=Jonathan | date=November 21, 1988 | url=https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A7149887/GPS?sid=wikipedia | title=Willow kids: not your normal South Bronx start-up | journal=PC Week | publisher=Ziff-Davis | volume=5 | issue=47 | page=77 | via=Gale}} The Publishers' VGA was relatively low-cost and had the advantage of being able to capture a single frame from a composite video source without the video source needing to be paused. The card tied in with Willow's Video Capture Software (VCAP), which could export the frame grab to a number of image file formats, including TIFF, PCX, and EPS.

Later in 1988, the company introduced the VGA-TV, a device which could output full VGA video over a composite signal, the first product on the market with this purpose.{{cite journal | last=Poor | first=Alfred | date=July 1989 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CbsaONN5y1IC&pg=PP160 | title=VGA and NTSC: Putting Your Program on TV | journal=PC Magazine | publisher=Ziff-Davis | volume=8 | issue=13 | page=158 | via=Google Books}} In 1990, the product was revised as the VGA-TV GE/O, which supported the superior S-Video signal, achieving near perfect reproduction of standard VGA pictures on certain equipped NTSC television sets, as well as genlocking, allowing multiple video sources to be overlaid through a video mixer without instability.{{cite journal | last=Grunin | first=Lori | author2=Tom Giebel | author3=John R. Quainn | date=September 29, 1992 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qwZH3rQBuOkC&pg=PA292 | title=VGA-to-NTSC Boards: Let's Go to the Videotape | journal=PC Magazine | publisher=Ziff-Davis | volume=11 | issue=16 | pages=239–293 | via=Google Books}}{{rp|291–293}} The VGA-TV saw widespread use in many disparate areas, including in the White House, where it was used to pipe the output of PC teleprompter software for Presidents George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton to read; as well as in the film industry, where it facilitated certain special effects.

Willow's website stopped updating in 2000 and went dark four years later.{{cite web | last= | first= | date=March 27, 2004 | url=http://willow.com:80/ | title=Official website of Willow Peripherals | publisher=Willow Peripherals | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20040327162420/http://willow.com:80/ | archivedate=March 27, 2004}} Compare with next available archived snapshot.

References