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tempaway43355 | 2 years ago

Just for comparison the Acorn Archimedes launched in 1987 with Arthur OS (later to become Risc OS) with a full windowed desktop with overlapping windows etc. They were able to pull this off because they had designed a new processor that they called the "Acorn RISC Machine"*

Screenshot of 1987 desktop here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_RISC_OS#/media/File...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_RISC_OS

* ARM for short, you might have heard of it

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pjc50|2 years ago

RISCOS was great, although slightly eccentric in a couple of ways:

- "we have a three button mouse, we're going to make use of all of them" as opposed to Apple

- instead of file pickers, saving was done by drag-and-drop: press save and a window pops up with the file, which you drag to a target folder.

The !Application system, an early bundle mechanism, was a simple and effective form of packaging without having to do anything fancy.

tempaway43355|2 years ago

Yeah that drag and drop save was funny. It was the era of 'lets do this using drag and drop just because it looks cool and metaphorical - you are literally PUTTING that file IN that folder - geddit?'

johnflan|2 years ago

I don’t agree that it was eccentric, I used these as my first machine and they felt pretty natural. I would also suggest that these interactions weren’t completely standardised at that point.

johnflan|2 years ago

The Acorn was a marvel of its day (to me at least)

mnd999|2 years ago

AmigaOS was similar (with a 68k) and that launched in 1985.