Music Works, also Music Works Personal, was a music notation sequencing program for Windows 9x that used midi protocol technology. It was developed by Brisbane, Australia based Middle Earth Software in the late 90s, which then changed its name to Tierra Media (which means "Middle Earth"). Its native file format was .MWW, but it could also import and export .mid. It had a font-based interface, and formatting up to the look of professional notation. Early versions of Music Works featured commonwealth music terms, and an easily crackable bug: the copy protection for the trial version could be circumnavigated by simply reinstalling the program. This was only fixed in the final, polished version, which was Music Works 3.5 Personal. With that, Middle Earth Software changed to tierramedia.com.

MWW [link]

MWW was the non-documented, proprietary binary file format developed by Middle Earth Software that stored MIDI and additional information. The .mww files were typically about six to eight times larger than .mid files. Music Works had an autosave feature that created a "~MW" file, identical to an MWW file, that backed up the music while being working on. The program was stable enough that this was in case the OS crashed or some other problem was caused by multi-tasking.

Music Works featured an interesting bug from a combination of OS obsolescence and their proprietary format. Since Music Works could only run in the 9x kernel, and .mww was limited to Music Works, music saved as .mww can neither be played, as there are no .mww players, nor converted to .mid, as Music Works only ran in the 9x kernel. The result was thousands of silent, unplayable music files.

External links [link]

  • https://www.tierramedia.com/about.asp Site of Tierra Media, formerly Middle Earth Software. The buy page was never made, even though the software was. All of the distributors listed on the about page went down years ago, except for Manaccom, which is still selling Music Works as recently as September 2010:
"Manaccom - Australia / New Zealand, Guildsoft - UK / Europe, Trius Inc - United States"

https://wn.com/Music_Works

MWW

MWW may refer to:

  • Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon test, one of the best-known statistical significance tests
  • Monster Worldwide, a website operating company whose NYSE ticker symbol is MWW
  • MWW (company), a public relations firm in New Jersey
  • Marquis Who's Who, a publisher of directories containing short biographies of influential persons
  • Myanmar Wide Web, a tongue-in-cheek reference to restricted Internet in Burma
  • SIL code of the Hmong language
  • Milky Way Wishes, one of the subgames in Kirby Super Star
  • .MWW, a MIDI file format for Music Works by Middle Earth Software
  • Mud-weight window, a term used in oil and gas drilling technology dealing with the weight of the mud applied to counterbalance the gas pressure
  • Missing white woman, or "Married White Woman"
  • See also

  • MW2 (disambiguation)
  • MWW (company)

    MWW is a public relations firm headquartered in New York, NY. The company works in public relations and marketing, technology, digital and social media marketing, public affairs and government relations, corporate communications, healthcare, sustainability, and visual branding.Michael W. Kempner is the company’s founder, president, and CEO. The firm's corporate headquarters is in East Rutherford, New Jersey with offices in Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Trenton, NJ, Washington, D.C., and London.

    History

    Michael Kempner founded MWW as a one-person venture in 1986. MWW grew to the 4th largest independent public relations firm in the U.S. and Kempner sold the company to the Interpublic Group of Agencies in 2000.

    In 2010, Kempner led a management led buy-out.

    On January 14, 2014 the Department of Housing and Urban Development announced that it would review the expenditures for the Stronger than the Storm media campaign which had been commissioned by the New Jersey Economic Development Authority to promote tourism in summer 2013 in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy. The audit found that the company had done "nothing improper" in the content of its marketing campaign. Governor Chris Christie later dismissed criticism of the campaign, citing that it contributed to record tourism dollars in 2013.

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