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ANALYSIS: When Apple first started selling the Macintosh, few people
realized how it would change almost everything about personal computing.
to read this article please click on word buttons above. this is the most I could quote.
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Mac's Graphical Screen Transformed Personal Computing 30 Years Ago
NEWS ANALYSIS: When Apple first started
selling the Macintosh, few people realized how it would change almost
everything about personal computing.
When I was introduced to the original Macintosh
early in 1984, I looked at the device on the table in front of me with a
sense of wonder. It wasn't because I was blown away by the technical
innovation. Rather, I was wondering why anyone would want to work on a
computer with a tiny 9-inch screen.
At the time I was looking at the first Mac,
I was a Navy officer stationed in Columbus, Ohio, where I was the
executive officer of what was then the Defense Logistics Agency's
Systems Automation Center. So when the local (and original) Micro Center
store in Columbus invited business leaders over to see the new Mac, I
got an invitation and accepted it. This was, after all, the same store
where I'd had my first look at Ethernet, another transformative event.
Of course, at the time I didn't realize that what I was seeing would
prove to be transformative. I was looking at the Mac to see if there was
any possibility that it might have a role in our part of the military's
computing infrastructure. In those days, our primary computers were
Amdahl V7c and V8 mainframe computers, which were clones of IBM
mainframes.
I had been deeply involved in the earliest contracts that brought
personal computers into the military. By this time, I'd already
purchased the first of the Zenith computers that eventually became the
standard in the Navy. These computers ran MS-DOS, but were not fully IBM-PC compatible. They also ran the old CP/M operating system, and it was the ability to run both operating systems that got our attention.
Protecting Android™ Applications with Secure Code Signing Certificates
- See more at: http://www.eweek.com/pc-hardware/macs-graphical-screen-transformed-personal-computing-30-years-ago.html/#sthash.DxugtQxr.dpuf
Mac's Graphical Screen Transformed Personal Computing 30 Years Ago
NEWS ANALYSIS: When Apple first started
selling the Macintosh, few people realized how it would change almost
everything about personal computing.
When I was introduced to the original Macintosh
early in 1984, I looked at the device on the table in front of me with a
sense of wonder. It wasn't because I was blown away by the technical
innovation. Rather, I was wondering why anyone would want to work on a
computer with a tiny 9-inch screen.
At the time I was looking at the first Mac,
I was a Navy officer stationed in Columbus, Ohio, where I was the
executive officer of what was then the Defense Logistics Agency's
Systems Automation Center. So when the local (and original) Micro Center
store in Columbus invited business leaders over to see the new Mac, I
got an invitation and accepted it. This was, after all, the same store
where I'd had my first look at Ethernet, another transformative event.
Of course, at the time I didn't realize that what I was seeing would
prove to be transformative. I was looking at the Mac to see if there was
any possibility that it might have a role in our part of the military's
computing infrastructure. In those days, our primary computers were
Amdahl V7c and V8 mainframe computers, which were clones of IBM
mainframes.
I had been deeply involved in the earliest contracts that brought
personal computers into the military. By this time, I'd already
purchased the first of the Zenith computers that eventually became the
standard in the Navy. These computers ran MS-DOS, but were not fully IBM-PC compatible. They also ran the old CP/M operating system, and it was the ability to run both operating systems that got our attention.
Protecting Android™ Applications with Secure Code Signing Certificates
- See more at: http://www.eweek.com/pc-hardware/macs-graphical-screen-transformed-personal-computing-30-years-ago.html/#sthash.DxugtQxr.dpuf
Mac's Graphical Screen Transformed Personal Computing 30 Years Ago
NEWS ANALYSIS: When Apple first started
selling the Macintosh, few people realized how it would change almost
everything about personal computing.
When I was introduced to the original Macintosh
early in 1984, I looked at the device on the table in front of me with a
sense of wonder. It wasn't because I was blown away by the technical
innovation. Rather, I was wondering why anyone would want to work on a
computer with a tiny 9-inch screen.
At the time I was looking at the first Mac,
I was a Navy officer stationed in Columbus, Ohio, where I was the
executive officer of what was then the Defense Logistics Agency's
Systems Automation Center. So when the local (and original) Micro Center
store in Columbus invited business leaders over to see the new Mac, I
got an invitation and accepted it. This was, after all, the same store
where I'd had my first look at Ethernet, another transformative event.
Of course, at the time I didn't realize that what I was seeing would
prove to be transformative. I was looking at the Mac to see if there was
any possibility that it might have a role in our part of the military's
computing infrastructure. In those days, our primary computers were
Amdahl V7c and V8 mainframe computers, which were clones of IBM
mainframes.
I had been deeply involved in the earliest contracts that brought
personal computers into the military. By this time, I'd already
purchased the first of the Zenith computers that eventually became the
standard in the Navy. These computers ran MS-DOS, but were not fully IBM-PC compatible. They also ran the old CP/M operating system, and it was the ability to run both operating systems that got our attention.
Protecting Android™ Applications with Secure Code Signing Certificates
- See more at: http://www.eweek.com/pc-hardware/macs-graphical-screen-transformed-personal-computing-30-years-ago.html/#sthash.DxugtQxr.dpuf
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