Muse.com was registered in 1994, by Warren Stringer
and advised by Carl Wescott, Keith Chreston, Gordon Fuller, Carl Page,
and Martin Tickle.
Much of the original inspiration was from some friends kids, from
18 months on up, and from Lea, the first 7 and a half year old Vj.
Muse.com is not related to the rock group, nor the music indexing
service at muZe.com,
nor the 3D authoring toolkit at MuseCorp.com, nor Albert Brooks' movie,
let alone the aphrodisiac or the dozens of others who have added the moniker
'muse’ to their creative endeavor. Nope. Muse.com is merely what it always
has been: a work in progress to support the muse on the web.
So, who is Muse.com serving?
For the last couple years, we've been carting around a simple prototype
and found it to be highly addictive to 4-year-olds boys, 7-year-old girls,
Hispanic and European teens, 20-something clubbers, and post flower-power
boomers. This is a roundabout way of saying that our audience is universal;
we serve anyone with an interest in exploring the muse.
As game consoles grow up into becoming generic multimedia hubs, Muse.com
will be there to enable anyone to express his or her muse to the World,
at large.
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