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A Technical History of Apple's Operating Systems

An anonymous reader writes "As part of his 1680-page book Mac OS X Internals: A Systems Approach, Amit Singh of kernelthread.com wrote a very detailed technical history of Apple's operating systems. Since he had to cut down on the history chapter because of the book's already too-large size, most of this chapter didn't make it to the printed book. Singh has made available the history chapter as a free PDF. The file is 140 pages long, and is generously filled with figures and screenshots. It starts with the internals of the original Apple I and goes through a tour of all operating systems Apple dabbled with, including internals of A/UX, Lisa OS, and such. It even covers details of outside influences like the Xerox Alto, STAR System, Smalltalk, and Sketchpad, and closer to home things like Mach, NeXTStep, and OpenStep."

1 of 244 comments (clear)

  1. Re:What I want to know is by 0racle · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Be died because there were few apps for it and the first versions you had to by the BeBox. BeFS was not new either. There was no good reason to use Be, it solved no problem that couldn't be solved with existing OS's.

    --
    "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."