In 1996, Cane wrote simple automated scripts for websites for instructors using the
Perl programming language and
Netscape 2.0. In 1997, after the founding of CourseInfo, version 1.0 of the "Teachers Toolbox" was launched including a series of named "Generator" tools including the course site generator, announcement generator, quiz generator, survey generator and other tools. Gilfus designed the features and functions and web design of the product through personal experience and instructor feedback while Cane developed the core technology of the product. Gilfus also led sales, marketing and product management for the company. Much of the company's initial communication was on educational listservs and web boards. In mid-1997, the "Interactive Learning Network" ILN 1.5, was released and installed at several academic institutions including
Cornell University,
Yale Medical School and
University of Pittsburgh. The ILN was the first e-learning system of its kind to leverage and install on top of a
relational database MySQL. Access control was added to provide security around course content. Guest access was provided for course shopping. In 1998, the CourseInfo product line (then the Interactive Learning Network or ILN) became the foundation for Blackboard's
e-learning product line as Blackboard's CourseInfo. On April 29, 1998, the CourseInfo was among the first to implement emerging industry standards. On November 2, 1998, the company released CourseInfo 2.0, and on July 26, 1999, they released CourseInfo 3.0 CourseInfo 4.0. was released on October 26, 1999 On January 19, 2000, the company released CourseInfo Enterprise Edition. Prior to the Blackboard–CourseInfo merger, Blackboard was focused on developing a prototype for IMS (Instructional Management Systems). ==Blackboard overview==