08 – Macintosh and the GUI Revolution: “The Computer That Understands People” (1984–1990)
This eighth episode tells the story of a defining moment in computing:the launch of the Apple Macintosh — the first successful commercial platform with a graphical user interface (GUI), designed not for engineers, but for everyday people. It introduced a new vision for human–computer interaction that still shapes systems today. 1. Origins: From Xerox PARC to California In 1979, Steve Jobs and Apple engineers visited Xerox PARC and saw the Alto prototype — a computer with a mouse and graphical desktop.The concept inspired Apple Lisa (1983), and from 1981, a secret team led by Jef Raskin began developing the Macintosh. Key ideas: Early Macintosh prototype at the Computer History Museum, Author: ArnoldReinhold, License: CC BY-SA 4.0 2. Macintosh 128K – The Legend Begins (January 24, 1984) The original Mac was an all-in-one system: Defining GUI features: Steve Jobs and Macintosh computer, January 1984, Bernard Gotfryd – Edited from tif by CartPublic domain 3. Interface Revolution – People First Everything in the Mac revolved around user experience and ergonomics: Famous “Test Drive a Macintosh” campaign let users borrow a Mac for 24 hours — a hands-on GUI experience. 4. Software and Legacy The first Mac shipped with MacWrite and MacPaint — apps built specifically to showcase the graphical desktop. Soon followed: System differences vs. DOS/PC: System 1, Apple Inc. 5. Mac vs. PC – Two Different Worlds Apple pursued vertical integration — controlling both hardware and software. 6. Legacy of the “Graphical Revolution” The Macintosh proved that computers could be intuitive, aesthetic, and user-friendly. Mac OS and Apple hardware became synonymous with simplicity and reliability.The “point & click” GUI philosophy spread across the industry — to PCs, UNIX systems, Linux, and beyond. To this day, macOS is a symbol of refined design. Its DNA lives on in the iPhone, iPad, and every modern graphical OS.Later versions — System 7, Mac OS 8/9, and macOS (formerly OS X) — continued evolving the 1984 vision.


