- turtlesareneat@piefed.caEnglish9 hours
Remember Kodak too but it’s not their fault someone else took digital photography and actually did something with it.
- 9 hours
Didn’t the Xerox Alto have a GUI? That was released in 1973.
- Bloefz@lemmy.worldEnglish14 hours
Well it didn’t really bring it to us because they never sold it to anyone. They could have been the top dog in computing
TheTechnician27@lemmy.worldEnglish
13 hoursDo you mean that sales were poor? If not, and you mean that literally, then they did – about 25,000 units, making it a commercial failure, but nevertheless “brought”.
- Bloefz@lemmy.worldEnglish2 hours
Oh I didn’t realize they actually sold it as a product. I thought it never left the lab, sorry.
cannedtuna@lemmy.worldEnglish
12 hoursXerox made a bunch of bad business decisions that caused a household name to disappear.
Xerox invented the GUI, mouse, and Ethernet. But basically because sales didn’t immediately do well they killed revolutionary innovations and let IBM, Apple, and Microsoft benefit from their work.
- 10 hours
Back in 1995, I did “0300” work for AT&T - customer service for residential long distance customers. We used Xerox machines of some sort. I don’t remember all that many details, but it was probably a successor to the Star systems. There was a GUI and windows, although almost everything we did used terminal-type windows, connecting to various systems to look up information and make necessary changes. I do remember there was a GUI-type app for the ANI - automatic number identification - that basically gave us caller ID (number, no names) when we got a call. It didn’t always give us the number, but usually did.
I was so young and hadn’t learned yet (with my then-undiagnosed ADHD) that phone jobs were NOT a good fit for me… I’d log in each day to customize the colours and sizes of things, which it wouldn’t save once I’d logged out. But I couldn’t stand the defaults, and also it slowed me down getting on the phones (although it counted against me and was part of the reason I lost that job - time spent outside of the queue. heh)
- Iusedtobeanalien@lemmy.worldEnglish13 hours
The first I used was gem on the Atari ST, was pretty cool and highly intuitive
- SreudianFlip@sh.itjust.worksEnglish5 hours
My 520ST paid much of my way through university using PaperClip to format documents for other students.
It led me into exploring TeX on the school mainframe, and unix.
Later, I worked with possibly the very first gui granular synthesizer program, developed on a ST1040, which was kind of old at that point.
- agentTeiko@piefed.socialEnglish10 hours
Every time this gets brought up it makes me want to mess with SmallTalk again.
- [object Object]@lemmy.caEnglish13 hours
Wow, always thought this was just a demo, the apps actually look pretty well fleshed out




