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History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS | A Wisdom Archive on History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS |  | History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS A selection of articles related to History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS |  |
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More material related to History Of The Graphical User Interface can be found here:
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History of the graphical user interface, History of the graphical user interface - Amiga Intuition, History of the graphical user interface - Apple Lisa and Macintosh, History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS, History of the graphical user interface - BeOS, History of the graphical user interface - DESQview, History of the graphical user interface - GEM, History of the graphical user interface - GEOS, History of the graphical user interface - Initial Developments, History of the graphical user interface - Mac OS X, History of the graphical user interface - Microsoft Windows, History of the graphical user interface - NeWS, History of the graphical user interface - NeXTSTEP, History of the graphical user interface - OS/2, History of the graphical user interface - RISC OS, History of the graphical user interface - The X Window System, History of the graphical user interface - Trivia, History of the graphical user interface - Windows Vista, History of the graphical user interface - Xerox PARC, Apple v. Microsoft, Bill Atkinson, The Blit - A Multiplexed Graphics Terminal by Rob Pike in 1982, Direct manipulation interface, Doug Engelbart's On-Line System, Graphical user interface, History of computing hardware, History of Microsoft Windows, Ivan Sutherland's Sketchpad, Jef Raskin, Office of the future, Mezzo
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ARTICLES RELATED TO History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS |  |  |  | History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - Amiga IntuitionThe Amiga computer was launched by Commodore in 1985 with a GUI called Workbench based on an internal engine which drives all the input events called Intuition, and developed almost entirely by RJ Mical. Users may remember the initial releases for their garish blue/orange/white/black palettes, selected for high contrast. The Amiga team chose it, basing their job on direct experiences made to obtain better contrast solution using even the worst televisions the team could find. Workbench presented directories as "drawers" because the idea was to pre ...
See also:History of the graphical user interface, History of the graphical user interface - Initial Developments, History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS, History of the graphical user interface - Xerox PARC, History of the graphical user interface - Apple Lisa and Macintosh, History of the graphical user interface - DESQview, History of the graphical user interface - GEM, History of the graphical user interface - Amiga Intuition, History of the graphical user interface - Microsoft Windows, History of the graphical user interface - GEOS, History of the graphical user interface - RISC OS, History of the graphical user interface - NeXTSTEP, History of the graphical user interface - OS/2, History of the graphical user interface - BeOS, History of the graphical user interface - NeWS, History of the graphical user interface - The X Window System, History of the graphical user interface - Mac OS X, History of the graphical user interface - Windows Vista, History of the graphical user interface - Trivia Read more here: » History of the graphical user interface: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - Amiga Intuition |
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 |  |  | History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - Mac OS XApple released Mac OS X in 2001 with the Aqua interface. It was a new operating system built primarily on technology from NeXTStep with UI elements of the original Mac OS grafted on. Mac OS X uses a technology called Quartz for graphics rendering and drawing on-screen. Some interface features of Mac OS X are inherited from NeXTStep (such as the Dock, the automatic wait cursor, or double-buffered windows giving a solid appearance and flicker-free window redraws), while others are inherited from the old Mac OS operating system (the single syst ...
See also:History of the graphical user interface, History of the graphical user interface - Initial Developments, History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS, History of the graphical user interface - Xerox PARC, History of the graphical user interface - Apple Lisa and Macintosh, History of the graphical user interface - DESQview, History of the graphical user interface - GEM, History of the graphical user interface - Amiga Intuition, History of the graphical user interface - Microsoft Windows, History of the graphical user interface - GEOS, History of the graphical user interface - RISC OS, History of the graphical user interface - NeXTSTEP, History of the graphical user interface - OS/2, History of the graphical user interface - BeOS, History of the graphical user interface - NeWS, History of the graphical user interface - The X Window System, History of the graphical user interface - Mac OS X, History of the graphical user interface - Windows Vista, History of the graphical user interface - Trivia Read more here: » History of the graphical user interface: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - Mac OS X |
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 |  |  | History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - Windows VistaWindows Vista, Microsoft's next-generation operating system - planned for release in late 2006, and currently in beta - will feature a significantly different GUI from previous Windows versions. The new user interface, dubbed Aero, is split into two modes: Windows Vista Aero and Windows Vista Basic. The Windows Vista Aero mode will use pixel shader effects - commonly used in games such as Half-Life 2 and Doom 3 to draw effects such as water - and alpha PNG transparency to draw windows and give a "Glass" effect. The Windows Vista Basic mode i ...
See also:History of the graphical user interface, History of the graphical user interface - Initial Developments, History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS, History of the graphical user interface - Xerox PARC, History of the graphical user interface - Apple Lisa and Macintosh, History of the graphical user interface - DESQview, History of the graphical user interface - GEM, History of the graphical user interface - Amiga Intuition, History of the graphical user interface - Microsoft Windows, History of the graphical user interface - GEOS, History of the graphical user interface - RISC OS, History of the graphical user interface - NeXTSTEP, History of the graphical user interface - OS/2, History of the graphical user interface - BeOS, History of the graphical user interface - NeWS, History of the graphical user interface - The X Window System, History of the graphical user interface - Mac OS X, History of the graphical user interface - Windows Vista, History of the graphical user interface - Trivia Read more here: » History of the graphical user interface: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - Windows Vista |
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 |  |  | History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - The X Window SystemThe standard windowing system in the Unix world, developed in the early 1980s, is the X Window System (commonly X11 or X). X was developed at MIT as Project Athena. Its original purpose was to allow users of the newly emerging graphic terminals to access remote graphics workstations, without regard to the workstation's operating system or the hardware. Due largely to the availability of the source code used to write X, it has become the standard layer for management of graphical and input/output devices and for the building of both local and remote gra ...
See also:History of the graphical user interface, History of the graphical user interface - Initial Developments, History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS, History of the graphical user interface - Xerox PARC, History of the graphical user interface - Apple Lisa and Macintosh, History of the graphical user interface - DESQview, History of the graphical user interface - GEM, History of the graphical user interface - Amiga Intuition, History of the graphical user interface - Microsoft Windows, History of the graphical user interface - GEOS, History of the graphical user interface - RISC OS, History of the graphical user interface - NeXTSTEP, History of the graphical user interface - OS/2, History of the graphical user interface - BeOS, History of the graphical user interface - NeWS, History of the graphical user interface - The X Window System, History of the graphical user interface - Mac OS X, History of the graphical user interface - Windows Vista, History of the graphical user interface - Trivia Read more here: » History of the graphical user interface: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - The X Window System |
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 |  |  | History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - GEOSGEOS was another very early graphical desktop system. Originally written for the 8 bit home computer Commodore 64 it was later ported to IBM PC systems. It came with several application programs like a calendar and word processor, and a cut-down version served as the basis for America Online's DOS client. Compared to the competing Windows 3.0 GUI, it could run reasonably well on simpler hardware.
Revivals were seen in the HP OmniGo handhelds, Brother GeoBook line of laptop-appliances, and the New Deal Office package for PCs. Related c ...
See also:History of the graphical user interface, History of the graphical user interface - Initial Developments, History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS, History of the graphical user interface - Xerox PARC, History of the graphical user interface - Apple Lisa and Macintosh, History of the graphical user interface - DESQview, History of the graphical user interface - GEM, History of the graphical user interface - Amiga Intuition, History of the graphical user interface - Microsoft Windows, History of the graphical user interface - GEOS, History of the graphical user interface - RISC OS, History of the graphical user interface - NeXTSTEP, History of the graphical user interface - OS/2, History of the graphical user interface - BeOS, History of the graphical user interface - NeWS, History of the graphical user interface - The X Window System, History of the graphical user interface - Mac OS X, History of the graphical user interface - Windows Vista, History of the graphical user interface - Trivia Read more here: » History of the graphical user interface: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - GEOS |
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 |  |  | History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - Microsoft WindowsMicrosoft modeled the first version of Windows, released in 1985, on the GUI of the Mac OS. Windows 1.0 was a GUI (graphic user interface) for the MS-DOS operating system that had been the OS of choice for IBM PC and compatible computers since 1981. Windows 2.0 followed, but it wasn't until the 1990 launch of Windows 3.0 that its popularity truly exploded. The GUI has seen major and minor redesign since, notably the addition of Finder-like file-management to the desktop in Windows 95 ("Chicago"), the much-debated browser integration of Windows 98, and the c ...
See also:History of the graphical user interface, History of the graphical user interface - Initial Developments, History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS, History of the graphical user interface - Xerox PARC, History of the graphical user interface - Apple Lisa and Macintosh, History of the graphical user interface - DESQview, History of the graphical user interface - GEM, History of the graphical user interface - Amiga Intuition, History of the graphical user interface - Microsoft Windows, History of the graphical user interface - GEOS, History of the graphical user interface - RISC OS, History of the graphical user interface - NeXTSTEP, History of the graphical user interface - OS/2, History of the graphical user interface - BeOS, History of the graphical user interface - NeWS, History of the graphical user interface - The X Window System, History of the graphical user interface - Mac OS X, History of the graphical user interface - Windows Vista, History of the graphical user interface - Trivia Read more here: » History of the graphical user interface: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - Microsoft Windows |
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 |  |  | History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - Apple Lisa and MacintoshBeginning in 1979, led by Jef Raskin, the Lisa and Macintosh teams at Apple Computer (which included former members of the Xerox PARC group) continued to develop such ideas. The Macintosh, released in 1984, was the first commercially successful product to use a GUI. A desktop metaphor was used, in which files looked like pieces of paper; directories looked like file folders; there were a set of desk accessories like a calculator, notepad, and alarm clock that the user could place around the screen ...
See also:History of the graphical user interface, History of the graphical user interface - Initial Developments, History of the graphical user interface - Augmentation of Human Intellect NLS, History of the graphical user interface - Xerox PARC, History of the graphical user interface - Apple Lisa and Macintosh, History of the graphical user interface - DESQview, History of the graphical user interface - GEM, History of the graphical user interface - Amiga Intuition, History of the graphical user interface - Microsoft Windows, History of the graphical user interface - GEOS, History of the graphical user interface - RISC OS, History of the graphical user interface - NeXTSTEP, History of the graphical user interface - OS/2, History of the graphical user interface - BeOS, History of the graphical user interface - NeWS, History of the graphical user interface - The X Window System, History of the graphical user interface - Mac OS X, History of the graphical user interface - Windows Vista, History of the graphical user interface - Trivia Read more here: » History of the graphical user interface: Encyclopedia II - History of the graphical user interface - Apple Lisa and Macintosh |
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