Check Out the Source Code For the Xerox Alto
jfruh writes The Xerox Alto is a computer legend: it was never sold to the public, but its window-based OS was the inspiration for both the original Mac operating system and Windows. Now you can check out its source code, along with code for CP/M, a similarly old school (though not graphical) operating system.
it wasn't woz.
it was bill atkinson.
http://www.folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Macintosh&story=I_Still_Remember_Regions.txt&topic=QuickDraw
LOL -- and a bit of Digital Research cluelessness from the past as well.
Gates got his ideas from Genghis Khan.
Oh, get over yourself. CP/M was 1975 for god's sake. In the same time period (and until substantially later), Unix filenames were limited to 14 characters. A diskette held 243 kB. Unix and CP/M didn't hold back anybody, you idiot. They opened the way.
BTW, people who use spaces in filenames are imbeciles. They don't have a clue how command lines operate. Point and click is about the limit of their brainpower.
What did YOU give the world in 1975?
In the bestselling tradition of The Soul of a New Machine, Dealers of Lightning is a fascinating journey of intellectual creation. In the 1970s and '80s, Xerox Corporation brought together a brain-trust of engineering geniuses, a group of computer eccentrics dubbed PARC. This brilliant group created several monumental innovations that triggered a technological revolution, including the first personal computer, the laser printer, and the graphical interface (one of the main precursors of the Internet), only to see these breakthroughs rejected by the corporation. Yet, instead of giving up, these determined inventors turned their ideas into empires that radically altered contemporary life and changed the world.