Posted on 11/20/2010 11:07:35 AM PST by WVKayaker
Today, in 1985, Windows 1.0 is released. It turned out to be a big deal.
(Excerpt) Read more at biggovernment.com ...
I think MS Windows didn’t really catch on in a big way until Windows 3.0 as I recall. That was the “no going back” moment.
>>I think MS Windows didnt really catch on in a big way until Windows 3.0 as I recall. That was the no going back moment.<<
You recall correctly. It was a sea change in terms of multi-processing and presentation graphics.
Before that it was nothing more than a slightly better version of the PET o/s (as far as look and feel).
The release of Windows 3.1 was the version which had PC users lining up at Egghead Software at the break of dawn to get a copy.
Boy isn't that the truth. It's amazing how much changed in 10 years.
Of course, we're going through the same thing now with cell phones. 10 years ago, even the name "Verizon" was only a few months old. Phones had screens that displayed numbers, sometimes names, and could emit a series of beeps.
Amazingly, in both cases, while they may not have been the first, Apple was the company that brought both industries to the mainstream.
I wonder what the next tech industry to be revolutionized will be.
3.1 was the version that seemed to get even the last MS-DOS holdouts onto Windows.
WIKI Windows 1.0 is a 16-bit graphical operating environment that was released on 20 November 1985[1]. It was Microsofts first attempt to implement a multi-tasking graphical user interface-based operating environment on the PC platform. Windows 1.0 was the first version of Windows launched. It was succeeded by Windows 2.0.
As I recall we were just off CPM and messing with DOS 2.0 and the problem with windows, DOS etc at that point were the COST and MONOCHROME monitors. I an sure for $10Gs you could have had Windows with a color monitor and a 30 MEG, not GIG, Hard drive. Hence the name Win-doze
>>I wonder what the next tech industry to be revolutionized will be. <<
True holograms. 3D TV is tiptoeing in that direction.
That is my prediction.
That and the complete confluence of phone/TV/cell/Internet into a seamless whole (we are 2/3 of the way there IMHO).
Windows 1.0 was no big deal. It was a feeble attempt to copy Mac. Not until Windows 3.0 did it get some legs.
Wish I’d been able to buy stock then.
-Amiga 1000
I know that the iPod, iPhone, and iPad have attracted a few PC users over to the Mac.
However, I seem to notice that every time I go into an Apple store, everyone is looking at the ones I listed above and almost nobody except me is looking at the Mac Pro systems.
Apple needs to solve that problem. I think even a simple brand renaming could help. That, and the price of course.
I was looking at the new Widows 7 phone. To me, it sure seems like it's just as powerful as a better laptop was maybe as recently as 8 years ago - computing power, not necessarily storage.
"I wonder what the next tech industry to be revolutionized will be."
My money is either bio-computing or something else that will break down the physical limitation that are quickly being approached with current semi-conductors, or some next-generation previously unimagined energy source.
I used it. Garbage then, garbage now.
Marty's first 'pooter (circa 1986)
Sometimes the CRT monitor's internal magnet interfered with the 5.25" floppy disk drives. So one had to separate the two with a stack of phone books.
Windows (n): 32 bit extension and a graphical shell for a 16 bit patch to an 8 bit operating system originally coded for a 4 bit microprossessor, written by a 2 bit company that can't stand 1 bit of competition. ~ EmptyV
[From the thread]
I had PCs exclusively until 2007. Now I use both, depending on the task.
The anniversary of Windows is bittersweet. Lots of wasted hours, reboots, blue screens. Windows 7 is very good, though. They finally got there.
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