1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)
Summary: ZDNet's 20th anniversary: In 1991, the world received the graphical user interface. Here's a look.
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Developed by Quarterdeck Office Systems, DESQView was a popular "Shell" for DOS which enabled a primitive form of multi-tasking of applications. This allowed popular productivity applications such as Lotus 1-2-3, WordPerfect and Harvard Graphics to be task-switched. In combination with a special memory manager known as QEMM on Intel 286, 386 and 486-baeed PCs, it allowed users to take advantage of more than 640K of memory and have several applications running in resident memory simultaneously.
DESQView, which was released in July 1985 -- only a few months before the release of Windows 1.0, was not the first task switcher for PC's -- that distinction goes to IBM's TopView, which never particularly caught on. DESQView itself would soon find itself in competition with Windows 386 and in 1990, Windows 3.0, which was a true, although non-preemptive multitasking GUI. By 1992, Quarterdeck did eventually release a full GUI version, of DESQView/X, but by then it was too late -- Microsoft had seized control of both the OS and GUI market for DOS with Windows 3.1 and its Office suite of native applications.
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Talkback
No mention of Mac OS?
RE: 1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)
LOL! That's a new one. Usually I'm branded a Windows shill.
RE: 1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)
RE: 1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)
I said Mac OS, not OS X.
Mac OS pre-dated OS X by approximately 17 years. I think it was a gross omission.
[i] I also discussed system 7 on the slide about Photoshop.[/i]
And? A cursory mention is all you can give it? IMO Mac OS was certainly deserving of its own mention. Especially when you spoke to DOS, DESQView, Lotus 1-2-3, dBase, WordPerfect , etc which aren't even GUI programs.
RE: 1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)
Yes but you imply that the first GUI OS was made in 1991, and that is not even close to being accurate.
RE: 1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)
In 2011 I use MS Excel to generate data that I copy and paste into PowerPoint to generate charts that I export as enhanced Windows metafiles that I import into Word documents.
The more things change....
(OLE has never worked, ever, for anyone!)
RE: 1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)
1984 was the year the world got GUI
RE: 1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)
The Xerox Alto launched in **1973** with a full GUI (icons, windows, scrollbars etc), mouse and ethernet networking (the latter of which Apple didn't add to the Mac for years, believing the floppy disk to be an acceptable alternative!).
That said, I agree the title of this article is bizarre - I don't see how 1991 was a particularly important milestone in the history of GUIs! :/
RE: 1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xerox_Alto
The Xerox Alto was an early personal computer developed at Xerox PARC in 1973. It was the first computer to use the desktop metaphor and mouse-driven graphical user interface (GUI).
It was not a commercial product, but several thousand units were built and were heavily used at PARC, other Xerox facilities, and at several universities for many years. The Alto greatly influenced the design of personal computers in the following decades, notably the Apple Macintosh and the first Sun workstations. It is now very rare and is a valuable collector's item.
RE: 1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)
The "ALL" part of the title makes it clear that the assumption is that most people started using GUI through Microsoft software. Which is true given Microsoft's popularity. Therefore the article is not about the year GUI was invented, but more about when GUI became accessible to everyone.
Novell
Novell
Well you are talking about a NOS here, not your standard desktop. I was maintaining a OS/2 network and several Novell networks at the same time and it was far easier to navigate around the Novell admin programs than OS/2. A GUI didn't really do anything to help the server.
RE: 1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)
RE: 1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)
And what about GEOS?
OS/2 is still used in some
As recently as a few years ago I was able to find OS/2 drivers for modern hardware and install OS/2 Warp 4 on a desktop.. No sound card support, but I found network drivers.
RE: 1991: The Year We All Got GUI (photos)