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Windows Microsoft Operating Systems

25 Years Today - Windows 3.0 387

An anonymous reader writes: Windows 3.0 was launched on 22 May 1990 — I know, 'coz I was there as a SDE on the team. I still have, um, several of the shrink-wrapped boxes of the product — with either 3.5 inch and 5.25 floppies rattling around inside them — complete with their distinctive 'I witnessed the event' sticker!

It was a big deal for me, and I still consider Win 3 as *the* most significant Windows' release, and I wonder what other Slashdotters think, looking back on Win 3?
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25 Years Today - Windows 3.0

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  • *shrug* (Score:4, Insightful)

    by msobkow ( 48369 ) on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:12PM (#49756427) Homepage Journal

    The Amiga did it better and earlier.

    • Re: *shrug* (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      That would be so awesome. .. if Amiga programming could have gotten anyone a job outside of a few sparse cities.

      It had to be a trusted business upgrade path to be viable. It had to run on big blue hardware.

      • Re: *shrug* (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Bollocks. The Amiga did get quite a bit of business use. They failed because of inept management.

        • Re: *shrug* (Score:5, Informative)

          by gavron ( 1300111 ) on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:50PM (#49756599)

          RIGHT!

          The Amiga Workbench was multitasking - the first of its kind for "microcomputers" and it was the bread and butter of airport displays, sports announcers annotating where basketball or football players were moving on the field, and real-time "video toaster" displays for TWO DECADES after.

          It was only in the late 2008-9/2010+ timeframe that Windows replaced Amiga displays for those things for realtime video annotations.

          So yes, the Amiga did it first better. (Grandparent was right)
          The Amiga did it for longer than anyone (sorry, Parent)

          So sorry the mods are like 15-20 years old and are bored by history and facts.

          E

          • Re: *shrug* (Score:4, Interesting)

            by CRC'99 ( 96526 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @02:46AM (#49757137) Homepage

            I remember in around 2000 the cable TV network we 'subscribed' to crashed.... about a dozen channels were showing the Amiga boot screen and were stuck until someone came along and fixed them. Was quite funny at the time.

          • RIGHT!

            The Amiga Workbench was multitasking - the first of its kind for "microcomputers" and it was the bread and butter of airport displays, sports announcers annotating where basketball or football players were moving on the field, and real-time "video toaster" displays for TWO DECADES after.

            It was only in the late 2008-9/2010+ timeframe that Windows replaced Amiga displays for those things for realtime video annotations.

            So yes, the Amiga did it first better. (Grandparent was right)
            The Amiga did it for longer than anyone (sorry, Parent)

            So sorry the mods are like 15-20 years old and are bored by history and facts.

            E

            It was outclassed even at the time it was being used for Babalon 5 by Pentium PCs and Macs. Amigas were only used for the first season...

            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V... [wikipedia.org]

            • Re: *shrug* (Score:5, Informative)

              by BasilBrush ( 643681 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @07:56AM (#49757791)

              There's two different things here. The Amiga's place in the broadcast TV and video effects world was it's features that allowed the graphics card to synchronise to an external vsync, and to generate TV standard signals, such that mixing live video signals and computer graphics was trivial.

              Separate to that was the ability to render complex 3D scenes, usually not in real time. For that, you needed (at that time) the most powerful CPU and FPU.

              Presumably for the most part Babylon 5 needed the latter, not the former.

      • At the time of windows 3.0, windows jobs were scarce too. Bigger market for some other systems at the time. Huge market for people not even on microcomputers, which was sort of a joke at the time.

    • Re:*shrug* (Score:5, Informative)

      by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Saturday May 23, 2015 @12:24AM (#49756743)

      Yes, Amiga was miles ahead. By then I had a decade with Apple ][ and Mac ... no way I could downgrade to DOS with a Windows disguise.

      Windows was sold to business. It had been said that no CIO would get fired for buying IBM. Well the mantra was shifting. Buying Windows was safe for Fortune 500 decision makers. According to conventional wisdom, Mac & Amiga were for hippies and weirdos.

      Windows was the Lowest Common Denominator (LCD) in the purchasing equation. The generic hardware and software were relatively inexpensive and all the hackers were offering dBase solutions for businesses. That combination was a nightmare for the business that just wanted results, no hassles.

      • Re: *shrug* (Score:2, Troll)

        by slick7 ( 1703596 )
        I still have Windows 1.0, in the box. The only thing missing is Bill Gates' autograph. I would never sell it. I am sure there are other drawbacks, but I am not a fan of the forced musical chair version upgrades. It would be nice to have a constantly upgraded version with real improvements. I was happy with XP, until I was forced into 95, then into Vista, then 7. Windows 8 sucks as will 10.
      • The problem was that the microcomputer market was reinventing the wheel all the time. Existing workstations, minis, and mainframes did so much more. But people who grew up on PC or Macs would naively ask "what's the point of multitasking?" That's one of the reasons IBM flubbed the market as they thought it wasn't ever going to be that big except as a front-end for major back office applications or localized spreadsheet type stuff.

        So when Amiga, Atari ST, Apple IIGS came out they all had so much better gr

        • Re:*shrug* (Score:5, Interesting)

          by bkmoore ( 1910118 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @04:00AM (#49757287)

          ...people who grew up on PC or Macs would naively ask "what's the point of multitasking?" That's one of the reasons IBM flubbed the market as they thought it wasn't ever going to be that big except as a front-end for major back office applications...

          IBM was a mainframe and mini-computer company that also sold micros. IBM understood multitasking better than anyone else, but they also understood that as soon as micros could multitask, had networking and became multi-user (file permissions) the market for minis and mainframes would shrink. IBM's PC strategy from the mid '80s to mid '90s could be summed up as using their influence to prevent networking, multi-tasking and file permissions from happening on the same platform at the same time.

          • Re:*shrug* (Score:5, Insightful)

            by turbidostato ( 878842 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @06:52AM (#49757623)

            "IBM's PC strategy from the mid '80s to mid '90s could be summed up as using their influence to prevent networking, multi-tasking and file permissions from happening on the same platform at the same time."

            Of course yes.

            That explains why in the mid '80s to mid 90's IBM was busy in a joint venture with Microsoft first and alone afterwards... to produce a PC system with networking, multi-tasking and file permissions and even 32 bits (OS/2).

            Or maybe you are wrong.

            • Re:*shrug* (Score:5, Interesting)

              by WheezyJoe ( 1168567 ) <fegg@nOsPAM.excite.com> on Saturday May 23, 2015 @08:15AM (#49757845)

              That explains why in the mid '80s to mid 90's IBM was busy in a joint venture with Microsoft first and alone afterwards... to produce a PC system with networking, multi-tasking and file permissions and even 32 bits (OS/2).

              Wasn't IBM forced into doing this by the roaring success of a company called Netware? Yeah, Netware. Remember them?
              The reason the PC succeeded was not because it was great out of the box... it was because of legions of 3d-parties hacking DOS with TSR add-ons that expanded the capabilities of the machine. Microsoft would play catch-up, incorporating the best of what was out there (e.g., memory managers), finally culminating in Windows, which was more than just a GUI... it was memory management, standardized device drivers, and networking packaged together.

              IBM was always late to the game. The RS/6000 line came late after Sun, Apollo, and DEC had already proved a market for desktop workstations (except for academia, did the PC/RT even count?) Then, they realized that Microsoft and Netware were slowly hacking the PC into a multitasking, networked workstation for a fraction of workstation prices. Businesses could buy 5, 10 Windows PC's for the price of one workstation, and manage it themselves without a service contract. By the time OS/2 came along, the war was already over, because as lousy and crashy as Windows could be, it had become ubiquitous, and anyway, when you want to sell MILLIONS of PC's, it's never about the OS... it's about the killer app(s) that runs on it. Windows was a platform to sell copies of Word and Excel. Nobody had any reason to write any killer app for OS/2 when they could write it once for Windows and get rich.

              That joint-venture? Too little, too late, again. IBM in the 80's and 90's was a string of awful decisions, and before it was over it was entirely feasible that the great IBM would disappear entirely (check out their stock price, rock-bottom in 92, 93).

        • Amiga beat those other systems out quite well by having a decent modern operating system too, not just another DOS type thing to run apps.

          It was a much better system, but it failed to beat those other systems out due to the Tramiels of business, if you can see what I did there.

    • The Amiga did it better and earlier.

      And using less RAM. I was always impressed by my Amiga's ability to multitask compared to the Windows machine I had at work.

    • by sgant ( 178166 )

      I was a major Amiga evangelist back then. But unfortunately, Commodore didn't really know what it had and screwed it all up. They kept trying to shoehorn it into being a "business" computer or something like that, instead of playing up on it's strengths over DOS and the dreadful Macs at the time.

      And ultimately, what made the Amiga great was also it's downfall, as it's special chips (Agnes, Paula, Denise etc) couldn't really scale to a new architecture.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:19PM (#49756451)

    Released in the early 90s, but I got to use 4.0 first in the later 90s as a programming student.

    But when I used it, it was my first taste of an OS that didn't feel like a toy go kart where the wheels could rattle off any second. (Before I was introduced to Linux.) It's been the heart of window since Win2000.

    For that, NT 3.1 is the most significant Windows release ever imo.

    • I had limited exposure to Windows 3.0 (and 3.1). From a support angle, it was mostly a matter of it worked or it didn't (give or take memory limits). Windows for Workgroups (3.1 and 3.11) on the other hand holds many memories for me, almost all horrendous. To this day, I still do not understand why it would sometimes work Monday and Thursday, but simply refuse to network Tuesday and Wednesday. The hours I spent trying to make that garbage work ...
      • by TWX ( 665546 )
        Heh. I still remember how to install sound card drivers through the MCI control panel.

        I also worked at an early commercial ISP, helping people install Trumpet Winsock on their Windows 3.1 machines. It was probably WfW 3.11 now that I think about it, given that there had to be at least a rudimentary stub of a TCP/IP stack.

        I also worked with some interesting Novell applications where the diskless workstation would network-book to a Novell share, the user would log-in, get drive mappings in DOS, and fr
    • by chipschap ( 1444407 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @12:30AM (#49756771)

      Windows 3.0 (and subsequent in that series) was not an operating system, it was a windowing environment. Remember, it still ran on top of MS-DOS, and it was still effectively single-tasking in that switching tasks paused the previous task.

      Windows was not a true OS until Windows 95, as I recall the history.

      There were others, like GEM, that never really caught on despite their relative quality.

      But (to change the subject a little) I think the "big one that got away" was OS/2. A pity that IBM didn't know how to market it.

    • For that, NT 3.1 is the most significant Windows release ever imo.

      The big change for me was with Win95. All earlier versions of Windows were bolted on top of MS-DOS, although many people had it started by AUTOEXEC.BAT so they never needed to notice that DOS was still there. Starting with Win95, however, the default was for the computer to boot directly into Windows unless you went out of your way to make it come up in CLI mode. And, as most users were more comfortable with the GUI, that just made thei
      • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @01:24AM (#49756947)
        Windows 95 was still sitting on DOS to a large extent, just not as visibly or largely as before. When you "shut down" windows and got the black screen with orange text that said you could now turn off the computer, if you typed the MS-DOS "mode" command with an option like 40-column you unmasked the hidden DOS prompt and could still use the computer.

        Windows 95 worked like a lot of 386-enhanced DOS-based games did, loading itself after using DOS as a means to get the program loaded. '98 and ME were similar, though when they tried to strip most of that out of ME they made things screwy.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:24PM (#49756475)

    The last version of Windows to never have had a remote exploit in the standard distribution.

  • by the_B0fh ( 208483 ) on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:24PM (#49756481) Homepage

    It obviously helped make Microsoft a lot of money, and I've read about how the one guy managed to make that one thing work, that made this possible.

    But Windows is full of crap, and full of "If you can't make it work right, make it look good - Bill Gates" that it basically caused IT to be shit. This is the start of the 3 Rs of Windows. Retry, Reboot and Reinstall.

    That is a fucked up legacy to leave behind.

  • My first computer was the C64, when i was 5 and i didnt get a different one until about 5 years later when I got myself on win 3.1 (with tabworks)

    while I had a blast on the C64, at the time i was too young to really appreciate it. when i got my compaq with its ultra big HDD of 65 megabytes and my copy of Buzz Aldrins Race to Space simulator i spent HOURS on that thing tinkering and learning my way around DOS. the tabworks interface was amazing at the time, just point and click? how awesome!!!

    it was on
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:30PM (#49756519)

    and I remember thinking, "shit, Microsoft have done it again - we've lost control of our own PC market"
    Sure, OS/2 was technically much, much better, but that was not the point. Like MS DOS before it, MS Windows was available for all, on non-IBM hardware, so beige boxes could finally compete with the Apple's far superior HMI.
    The entire PC episode was a disaster for IBM - we rushed the thing out, and for the first time used COTS solutions, so once the BIOS had been (legally) reverse-engineered, Compaq and others could pump out boxes that were better and cheaper. IBM at that time was used to propriety hardware AND software to ensure lock-in and hence - frankly - obscene profit margins.
    That all went away very fast...the attempt to regain lock-in with the PS/2 of course failed....
    Mind you, Win 3.0 sucked....compared to both the Mac and OS/2, but it was....good enough

    • by 0xdeaddead ( 797696 ) on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:51PM (#49756603) Homepage Journal

      IBM shot OS/2 in the head when they announced it alongside the PS/2 in April of 1987.

      Microsoft had Windows/386 in November/December 1987. Think about that, 'EU DOS 4.0' aka where OS/2 came from was still in real mode, while MS had a 386 hypervisor that they were shipping out the Compaq before the end of '87. By forcing MS to keep OS/2 on the 286 without any 386 based features, and charging $2000+ for a SDK OS/2 was dead before 1.0 was even close to GA. And releasing 1.0 without the UI was a major disaster, 1.1 should have been the first public offering. 1.0 should have been given out for free along with the SDK to developers.

      But that's IBM thinking they can squeeze both ends of the toothpaste, dreaming they were the only game in town. Windows 3.0 showed Microsoft that they didn't need an IBM partnership anymore, and that their 'good enough' software was 'good enough' to sell on their own, and in their own direction.

  • by 0xdeaddead ( 797696 ) on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:36PM (#49756543) Homepage Journal

    this is where Microsoft broke away from being an IBM partner, to take control of their own destiny. IBM had effectively killed OS/2 with it's insane SDK prices, and per seat costs. Not to mention the complete lack of applettes, and by refusing to let Microsoft do anything with the UI, or allow for OS/2 to run windows binaries. But the success of Windows 3.0 changed all of that.

    What did Windows 3.0 give us? Well, while Windows/386 was a really cool 386 hypervisor, Windows itself, and all windows programs were restricted to 640kb of real mode memory. But Windows 3.0 was built around a MS-DOS extender, and now you could run in protected mode on a 286/386. And even better you didn't have to change your OS, just install Windows and go. Not to mention since it sat on DOS, you could still use MS-DOS based drivers, TSR's. It was simply a massive thing. Also licensing MS-DOS extenders at the time was VERY expensive, and per application. Writing a Windows application, along with the license costs of Windows 3.0 was much cheaper.

    From this point MS's OS/2 3.0 project became Windows NT, and MS pulled away from the deathmarch project that was OS/2 2.0. The funny thing is that OS/2 2.0 was delayed to add in the most confusing shell (to users, I know programmer's and tech people loved WPS, but to average users, it was a nightmare) and Windows compatibility via specialized drivers. Things that MS wanted to do, but IBM refused to let them.

    The sad thing is that bringing Windows up to some kind of usable level where OS/2 was basically already, and by making 286 processor based machines useful ended up setting us back a good 5+ years until the Windows 95 avalanche finally pushed 32bit computing to the masses. Although it wasn't until 2001 with XP Home did it finally become truly usable.

    NT, while being a solid future looking design was at the time so massive, and so complex that running it on a 386 was a horrible experience. But as processors got faster the NT investment eventually paid off, with NT being found almost everywhere these days.

    So yes, Windows 3.0 was the most significant product Microsoft shipped, that ended up not only defining the direction of the company, but also the industry. Finally everyone could unlock the power of their 286+ computer that was basically un-used by MS-DOS.

    • There was a product called DesQview, that did all that before win3 ever came out. And it did it better, more reliably, faster, and with the existing app. software.

  • by Guspaz ( 556486 ) on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:40PM (#49756553)

    Windows was such a huge pain back in those days, while MacOS (which wasn't really called that at the time) blew it out of the water, particularly when it came to multitasking.

    Of course, MacOS sat still for years, lacking protected memory or pre-emptive multitasking until they scrapped the whole thing and replaced it with NeXTSTEP to produce OS X, so Windows eventually caught up and then surpassed it. I had enough issues with Win95/98 and the DOS legacy to say that Windows probably didn't catch up (with a consumer OS) until Win2K, which surpassed MacOS, and that ruled the roost for a few years. OS X didn't come out until over a year later, and the early versions of that were super rough.

    But once they all evolved to a certain point, I think that the operating system mattered a lot less. They all got good enough that the users don't have to care about the low-level features, and there are utilities to tweak them any way you like, so it's really just down to personal preference at this point. You're going to run most of the same software no matter what OS you pick, and operating systems are increasingly just "the software that runs your web browser".

  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:44PM (#49756579)
    In 94 I went to Comdex, after having used OS/2 for a year or two. Microsoft had just announced Win95 would be released in 1995, giving IBM a 9 month + window to Do Something. At Comdex I found the IBM booth and asked them something about OS/2. Got a blank look. Asked someone else. Got a blank look. Nobody in the IBM booth had even heard of OS/2, let alone was able to answer questions about it.

    I knew that day that OS/2 was doomed.
  • by fred911 ( 83970 ) on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:45PM (#49756581) Journal

    When and if would would ever multitask as well as DESQview did.

  • by clovis ( 4684 ) on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:50PM (#49756597)

    Speaking as a support person, I loved Window 3.x.
    It trained the entire world to expect that their computer to crash often, even daily, and that those crashes could be explained away with "Yep, that happens".
    Followed by "You need to reboot more often".
    Before MS Windows, I supported mainframes and those customers wanted to know why for every crash, which was rare except for hardware failure, and they expected it to get fixed so that it didn't happen again. Those people are still like that, and they pay plenty for it.

    After MS Windows, life was pretty much like this:
    "My computer is broken."
          "Is it on fire?"
    "No."
          "Then reboot. If it still doesn't work I'll send someone to re-install everything" (thinly disguised threat)

  • YUCK! (Score:4, Informative)

    by Jim Sadler ( 3430529 ) on Friday May 22, 2015 @11:53PM (#49756615)
    Early versions of Windows are like remembering a rotten tooth aching and oozing. I'm still not using Microsoft products.
  • by Billly Gates ( 198444 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @12:07AM (#49756675) Journal

    I see buttons, shadows, depth, higher colors, etc.

    All ruined in the name of anti skuemorphism which was the most advanced progress made in gui development since win 3.0. What a shame sigh

  • I had a friend who had faithfully programmed for Windows 2 for a couple of years. Windows 2 was never popular, so his fine efforts didn't see much use. At that time, the lingua franca of Windows was MS Pascal. However, when Windows 3 came out, MS abandoned Pascal as the primary programming language for Windows and switched to C.

    As we now know, Windows 3 turned out to be Microsoft's first big success after DOS. So, my friend found himself sitting on a pile of Windows code that he had written in Pascal ov

  • It's good to be honest about your past. Nothing is gained by pretending that you were uninvolved in something you once did.

    However, like an alcohol or drug abuser who is in a state of denial about their past, you need to reexamine your behavior. You will never recover and regain your sense of self worth until you admit your destructive activities, ask for forgiveness, make amends to those you harmed, and actively pursue a path of helping others. It sounds like you are still obsessing about negative things

  • OK, you asked ... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @12:27AM (#49756763) Homepage

    It was a big deal for me, and I still consider Win 3 as *the* most significant Windows' release, and I wonder what other Slashdotters think, looking back on Win 3?

    Honestly, the Steaming Heap of IInnovative Technology that was Windows 3 is what led me to Linux and UNIX and much of the rest of my career.

    Right when nearing the end of Uni a free UNIX came along in the form of Linux ... because I had witnessed first hand what a steaming pile of crap was Windows 3, and then eventually Windows 3.11 (which sucked somewhat less, but not enough), I knew I wanted UNIX experience. It led to my first jobs.

    I will be marked troll by people who weren't there, but Windows 3 was such a steaming pile of shit compared to what Linux (and at some point FreeBSD) could do on the exact same hardware, it's almost impossible to describe.

    In 1993 no fewer than 3 other science nerds, to whom I said "hey, if you like Windows, far be it for me to judge ... but if you're asking for my Slackware disks and some install help, no problem -- I'll wipe out your new computer". They all switched to Linux because it was far more usable than Windows was on the same hardware. Even if Linux did occasionally crash, it was more robust than Windows. Because they could actually do several things at once.

    On the same hardware, Linux destroyed Windows 3/3.11.

    Windows 3 is significant in that it forced me to realize Windows wasn't anywhere NEAR being able to do what I'd learned in operating systems class ... I wrote an instance of pre-emptive multi-tasking before Microsoft made a commercial instance of it.

    That doesn't mean that I could write a better OS than Microsoft, but it means when Linux was doing pre-emptive multitasking with proper virtual memory ... Microsoft was doing time-slicing ... it was a hell of a better operating system than Microsoft had written.

    It just didn't have Word. It did, however, have LaTex ... yet another bit of awesome for a university student.

    So, Kudos to Windows 3 for being such an out-dated pile of crap technology by the time it was released that it wasn't even fully utilizing a 386's inbuilt hardware features for multitasking, and wouldn't until Windows '95 ... which made possible (and preferable) for the widespread popularity of Linux.

    If it hadn't sucked, we might not even know who Linus even is.

  • by caseih ( 160668 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @12:45AM (#49756835)

    I remember my neighbor running a brand new installation of Windows 3.0 a 386. The only native app was, if I recall, was Word, and it was pretty crappy back then. Windows 3.0 would UAE at the drop of a hat and hang completely. It wasn't until 3.11 that Windows became actually usable, though the architecture (cooperative multitasking) was so bad that I'm surprised any programmers stuck with the system long enough to develop any apps. I guess the promise of a stable GUI API and a standardized hardware abstraction layer (printers, etc) was enough. And Windows 3.11 introduced truetype fonts, which were pretty amazing compared to what we had before that time in Windows and MacOS.

    At college we used to say that only a fool would have win at the end of his autoexec.bat. The rest of us would run windows when we needed it, from the DOS prompt as God intended. I had a friend who ran OS/2 2.1 with a text-mode shell that multitasked MS-DOS apps, and that was far more useful at the time than Windows was, since all our apps were DOS apps back then.

    • 3.11 was Windows for workgroups, which actually was very good, probably better than 3.1. More stable anyway. Though 3.1 was way more stable than 3.0. No more UAEs. apps could actually crash without crashing the whole OS, if I recall correctly.

  • by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @12:49AM (#49756849)

    >" I wonder what other Slashdotters think, looking back on Win 3?"

    I was using Interactive Unix and SunOS Unix.

  • As long as people could run Word Perfect 5.1 and Lotus 1-2-3 everyone was happy. I remember people hating "Windows" versions of program as they sucked so badly initially.
  • by itomato ( 91092 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @01:22AM (#49756941)

    I asked myself,

      "Why is timothy still blocked? It's been ten years!"

    *uncheck*

    (months, mod points elapse)

        "25 Years Today - Windows 3.0"

  • Windows 3.0 was part of my first venture into the PC platform. I got my first computer, an Atari 800, in 1984. I stayed with the Atari 8-bit platform until 1991, when I was able to purchase my fist PC: an 80386SX-16, running DOS 3.3 and Windows 3.0. Windows 3.0, despite it's repeated UAE errors and other frustrations, was absolutely AWESOME. I was a junior in high school, and using a mouse and icons felt so cutting-edge and... just fun. I still used DOS WordPerfect 5.1 for serious document creation, bu
  • matter of taste. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by markhahn ( 122033 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @01:44AM (#49756985)

    win3 was important, mainly politically, though. after all, the windows of today is not decended from win3 - it's the not-love child of the OS/2 project, really. remember that around the time of your fabled 3.0 release, OS/2 was at the milestone version 2.0 which took advantage of 32b flat mode for the first time. and OS/2 was really just a sort of wet-nurse for NT OS/2, which became Windows NT and all recent versions...

  • The good ol' days (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jandersen ( 462034 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @02:28AM (#49757093)

    25 years, you say? It feels longer, somehow. Don't worry, I can see everybody's eyes glaze over, so I won't go too far down memory lane, except to say that there was actually a time when when Windows was cool and fun to work with. By gods, it was a load of crap, back then, but fun to code for, for that very reason. I used to spend 90% of my time commenting out code sections until the latest, spectacular error went away; that was how I learned to program properly in C. There is nothing like having to debug Windows running in real mode to bring home the idea that you must always initialise variable and check returned pointers. I sometimes miss the "hardship" in a perverse sort of way.

  • by TheRealHocusLocus ( 2319802 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @08:02AM (#49757813)

    Windows 3.0 was launched on 22 May 1990 â" I know, 'coz I was there as a SDE on the team. [...] It was a big deal for me, and I still consider Win 3 as *the* most significant Windows' release, and I wonder what other Slashdotters think, looking back on Win 3?

    Pleasedtomeet'cha. Some fine work you did on 3.x! Windows 2.11 was the first version I encountered, but we never really considered it more than a wrapper in which one could run Aldus PageMaker (the Adobe InDesign of today) to output to a LasterMaster 1000 [google.com] typesetter, which was 'the' first dry toner laser that could lay down small serif type that would reproduce on camera.

    Windows 3.0 was the first environment one could consider booting into and staying there... we sold a number of them for personal use and its stability for publishing began to rival the Mac (I'm a PC person but pull no punches). Wide adoption for business use in our area did not really start until 3.11 and even 95, but that was mainly because we had done our job 'really well' and had a large installed base of IBMPC/clones networked with Novell and LanTastic running DOS applications. Our customers were comfortable in the DOS environment and we didn't hurry them. Memory and CPU were precious and all graphical environments had plenty of 'hourglass' in those days.

    It's worth noting that graphical environments, even multi-tasking is pervasive today but it is still a learned skill and there were many people from the DOS era who had optimized their work techniques well into the Windows era. One fellow who dealt with real estate contracts tried Windows said "It can hardly keep up with my typing speed! This is an improvement?" Even the task switching latency of DesqView (which did lag because hard disk was really slow by today's standard) was a source of frustration to him. Most days he'd stay out of it. He'd seen examples of multitasking workflow and was not convinced. "My DOS programs import and export just fine. Exporting useful bits and naming them properly is an essential part of working efficiently. If you haven't done that you haven't finished the job. So... I'm supposed to bring up some old thing and cut and paste paragraphs or sentences of it into a new thing, one at a time, while switching between them? Look here." He shows me a folder with hundreds of small files. "That's my clipboard. I have all the names in my head. Some of the pieces have several variations, but I can import the whole thing and delete the unused parts faster than the graphic environment can scroll a document from top to bottom." He really could too, in the days of green phosphor displays he was able to read while scrolling quickly, while half the characters had fading ghosts of the previous line. He did not fully commit to a graphical environment until it was running on a 486.

    For all the early issues, Windows 3 was still a technician's dream. In order to fully appreciate its beauty, you would have had to experience the nefarious and wacky world of TSRs, IPX and 'packet driver' network stacks and DOS 386 memory extenders. When they finally did work they were really stable but it took a wizard's touch. Windows' driver architecture was well designed from the start.

  • by VAXcat ( 674775 ) on Saturday May 23, 2015 @04:12PM (#49759791)
    "And the Dark Lord made Orcs in mockery of Elves, and Trolls in mockery of Ents; and he made DOS in mockery of CP/M, and Windows in mockery of Macs, and NT in mockery of Netware; and he made Excel in mockery of VisiCalc, and Explorer in mockery of Navigator, and Word in mockery of WordPerfect; and he made MSNetwork in mockery of America Online; and on every side his foes fell reeling, defeated one by one as he crushed them by sheer weight of numbers, his hosts darkening the plain; and in the twilight years of the Second Millenium the Free Peoples of the West said, Lo, let us face this pestilence and destroy it, lest he turn all of Middle-Earth into a nest of foulness. And they forged the One OS, and they called it Copland; and they gathered their allies, the IBM Host and the Riders of Motorola, and they prepared for the final battle." Unfortunately, we lost the final battle, and the Darkness of Microsoft has swallowed up the land.

Solutions are obvious if one only has the optical power to observe them over the horizon. -- K.A. Arsdall

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