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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.

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#07 – The Dawn of the GUI: From Xerox Alto to Apple Lisa (1973–1983)

This seventh episode explores the origins of the Graphical User Interface (GUI) —a concept that forever changed how we interact with computers.From Xerox PARC’s experimental Alto to Apple’s bold but short-lived Lisa, these pioneering systems introduced the mouse, windows, icons, and menus — concepts that now define modern computing. 1. Xerox Alto – The Birth of the Graphical Desktop In 1973, Xerox PARC developed the Alto — widely regarded as the first computer with a true GUI: Although never released commercially, the Alto was used in research labs and universities —and it was here that core GUI ideas were born. Xerox Alto, Author: Joho345 – Own work, Public Domain 2. Xerox Star – The First Commercial GUI System In 1981, Xerox released the Xerox 8010 Star — the first commercially available computer with a full GUI. Despite its groundbreaking interface, Star was very expensive and mainly used in corporate settings — it never became a commercial hit.Still, its GUI design influenced everything from Macintosh to Windows, AmigaOS, GEM, and Atari TOS. Xerox Star, Author: vonguard, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license 3. Apple Lisa – The First Mouse-Included Computer In 1983, Apple introduced the Lisa — a GUI-based computer inspired by the Alto and Star, but built for everyday productivity. Lisa was highly innovative but extremely expensive ($9,995).It sold only a few thousand units — yet paved the way for the Macintosh, which was simpler, cheaper, and mass-market. Apple Lisa, Author: stiefkind, Creative Commons Zero, Public Domain Dedication 4. The Revolution of Mice, Windows, and Icons The GUI concept — from Xerox Alto and Star — was adopted first by Apple, then by Microsoft, and soon the entire computing industry.The mouse, window, icon, and contextual menu are obvious now — but in the early 1980s, they were shocking, and posed serious challenges for developers. Xerox PARC → Lisa → Macintosh → Windows → The modern IT world 5. Legacy of the GUI Pioneers Without Alto, Star, and Lisa, we wouldn’t have the interface that made computing accessible to non-tech users.

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