The Birth of the Apple Lisa 283
Ton writes "People think Apple stole the GUI from Xerox, but it's much more subtle than that. Braeburn has posted a story about the development and birth of the Apple Lisa, the first commercial computer with a graphical interface. More on this subject at Andy Hertzfeld's (one of the original developers of the Mac) site Folkore.org."
Hunh... (Score:2)
Re:Hunh... (Score:2, Informative)
And what's with all these articles from the braeburn guys? How many comments do we need showing they don't bother researching ANY facts about the things they write about? It's really getting twee to see so much attention put on morons who can't get a few simple facts straight.
Go google info about the Lisa. you'll find more correct info out there by looking for it yourself.
Re:Hunh... (Score:2)
Re:Hunh... (Score:2)
Re:Hunh... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Hunh... (Score:3, Informative)
That is correct. What most people don't know is that the 128K Mac almost ended up with Twiggy drives as well. If anyone has a 128K (possibly even a 512K) original Macintosh, Pull the back cover off. You may have to remove the motherboard to see this (its been a few years, so I don't recall exactly). The metal frame that holds the front plastic bezel has punchouts in it for a 5.25" drive. So the decision to go with the 3.5" drive in the Mac was made fairly late in the design cyc
Well, YES, they did steal the idea.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Xerox hired great people who created a new computer environment. Xerox management saw it and realised that it could make them rich. Xerox slapped a $50,000 price on it, sat back, did nothing with it, and watched it bomb, and have its central concept get stolen by the first hungry people to see it.
Apple hired great people who wished to create a new computer environment. Apple management saw Xerox's work and realised that it could make them rich. Apple copied it, slapped a $10,000 price on it, sat back, did next to nothing with it, and watched it bomb, and have its central concept get stolen by the first hungry people to see it.
Atari hired great people who wished to create a new computer environment. Atari's 'management' saw Apples's work and realised that it could make them rich. Atari copied it, slapped a $1,000 price on it, sat back, did next to nothing with it, and watched it bomb, and have its central concept get stolen by the first hungry people to see it.
Microsoft hired great people who wished to create a new computer environment. Microsoft management saw Atari's work and realised that it could make them rich. Microsoft copied it, slapped a $100 price on it, sat back, did next to nothing with it, and watched it soar, and have its central concept get stolen by the first hungry Unix programmers to see it.
The point? Stop your management monkeys from looking at the technology world as a means to get rich and more as way to build the framework and infrastructure that will allow wealth to be generated by new organizations and processes that are made possible by new technology. Then they will be able to make enough money to keep their pointy little heads happy.
Stop being so fucking greedy. Greed is not good. In the long run, it doesn't work.
Re:Well, YES, they did steal the idea.... (Score:2)
What specifically was this? It sounds almost like the ST, but the facts do not match the ST situation. The ST was a copy of the Mac ("Jackintosh") and did not have it
Re:Well, YES, they did steal the idea.... (Score:2)
Microsoft's Windows version 3 was a direct copy/steal of the Apple Macintosh GUI. It seperated the software from the hardware and was therefore able to sell for 1/10th the price of the Atari ST. Windows 3 users did need to upgrade to new Intel 386 -class machines in order to run Windows 3.
Each company attempted to get rich by stealing the same
Re:Well, YES, they did steal the idea.... (Score:2)
Don't quote history you don't actually know (Score:5, Informative)
Windows 3.0 users did NOT "need to upgrade" to intel 386 based machines (which were several years old by then - not NEW as you state) because Windows 3.0 in 1990 supported 3 modes.
Re:Well, YES, they did steal the idea.... (Score:3, Informative)
Interesting concept of steal: From TFA (which you no doubt read before offering your incisive wisdom):
Steve Jobs, convinced that the technology at PARC could help Apple usher in the eighties, offered Xerox a killer deal. Apple, which was still privately owned at the time, would allow Xerox to invest $1 million, which was sure to soar in value when the company went public in 1981 for t
Re:Well, YES, they did steal the idea.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Not as tired as we are about hearing how Microsoft stole everybody blind while everybody else was completely innocent and lovable and did no wrong.
Re:Well, YES, they did steal the idea.... (Score:3, Insightful)
You're just kidding yourself if you think MS is getting all that flack here because of their monopoly. It's cool to hate Microsoft. I don't have a problem with that. I don't have any love for MS either. But the hypocracy that is born from it is ridiculous and sometimes even dangerous.
There's a huge difference between apologizing for MS and showing a lit
Re:Well, YES, they did steal the idea.... (Score:2)
stole the graphical interface? (Score:3, Insightful)
Like it hadn't occurred to hundreds of people by that point that a graphical interface was a good idea? I mean don't think for a second that the first time someone pulled off a GUI, there weren't a hundred other companies immediately having meetings on how to take advantage of the idea. I'm guessing Apple was the quickest to implement.
Re:stole the graphical interface? (Score:2)
Yeah, but could they do it with only two weeks and a $100 budget?
What the hell, I've got karma to burn... [slashdot.org]
Re:stole the graphical interface? (Score:2, Troll)
Re:stole the graphical interface? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm terribly upset that they stole DOS for the measly price of a few thousand dollars
You have some upside-down view of the world. Stealing is not when you buy something.
Slashdot language lesson. (Score:2)
Get with it. Read any article on questionable music copying/downloading. On Slashdot, the word "steal" is used to mean "any activity the writer does not like".
Re:stole the graphical interface? (Score:2)
Two different things (Score:2)
What you describe further on is copyright infringement, not theft. Were you earlier referring to a case of actual theft that you did not describe?
apple was PAID a million dollars by xerox... (Score:2)
sweet deal, no?
sum.zero
Re:stole the graphical interface? (Score:4, Insightful)
Didn't want the graphical interface... (Score:4, Informative)
And the Intel processors of 1983-86 vintage were too underpowered to handle the overhead of a GUI at an acceptable performance level. Try booting one up in Win 2.0 some time...
BTW, a huge chunk of what we now consider standard interface stuff was invented for the Mac, such as the file interface.
Re:Didn't want the graphical interface... (Score:2)
I bet Apple could have done it. After all, they implemented a full color GUI on the Apple IIgs, which had a 2.8 MHz 65816.
I saw it when it first came out (Score:2)
But the bitmapped GUI was unlike anything you'd ever imagined. It wasn't even obvious how to start working with the thing. No one else was talking about anything similar at that time, at least not for practical, widespread usa
Re:I saw it when it first came out (Score:2)
I also saw it when it came out. It was instantly obvious to me that it was the wave of the future, and that e
It gets good here (Score:4, Interesting)
Steve Jobs (who took only Bill Atkinson along on his first visit), who had a rather limited understanding of technology, was most impressed by the graphical interface he saw running on the Alto. The interface was nothing like today's desktop based interfaces, but was a huge jump forward from the command line interfaces used everywhere else. When the engineers returned they had a vision of what they wanted in the Lisa project. The Apple chairman was so impressed that he interrupted a demo given by Larry Tesler asking him why nothing was being done with the technology. For the second visit, Jobs brought along several members of the Lisa project, and was given a much more technical demonstration. The other engineers who went on the second visit, who were briefed by Jef Raskin before their visit, were equally impressed.
The Apple engineers were not the only ones to be impressed by the visit, the researchers at Xerox, long discouraged by Xerox's inability to release a product based on the technology developed at PARC, were impressed by Apple's seeming willingness to implement advanced technologies in their products.
The Lisa project changed dramatically. No longer was it to be a mere hardware upgrade to the Apple II line, the new focus of the Lisa project was software. The team wanted to implement all of the innovations they saw at PARC."
It's not really stealing, but rather just "implimenting" someone elses innovations.
Re:It gets good here (Score:2)
It's like paying Ford to take a look and test drive a new Mustang, and then turning around and building a Corvette. Same ideas, different implementations.
Re: It gets good here (Score:4, Informative)
Steve Jobs, convinced that the technology at PARC could help Apple usher in the eighties, offered Xerox a killer deal. Apple, which was still privately owned at the time, would allow Xerox to invest $1 million, which was sure to soar in value when the company went public in 1981 for two guided tours of PARC's technology.
That looks like a pretty clear quid pro quo to me. Do you think the Xerox people who made this deal were idiots? Do you think they didn't know the probability the Apple people would take and build upon the things they saw at PARC-- things the Xerox suits had no plans to put into products of their own?
I suggest you watch Cringely's "Triumph of the Nerds"-- one of the people interviewed is Adele Goldberg, a former PARC staffer. In her interview, she explained that she made it clear to the Xerox suits what was likely to happen if the Apple people got their tour, and refused to give any demos to them unless they Xerox suits directly ordered her to do so. Which they did. The rest is history.
~Philly
Re: It gets good here (Score:4, Interesting)
Eventually Xerox sued Apple, but the case was thrown out for the same reason that Apple's case against MS was thrown out. The courts didn't buy the argument that a program's "look and feel" were covered by copyright.
Apple never tried to argue in that case that their tour of Xerox entitled them to any rights, by the way.
Re: It gets good here (Score:4, Informative)
That's true, but no reasonable person would be surprised that the Apple people would be influenced by the stuff they saw at PARC. My theory is that (at the time) the Xerox suits saw no value in what was being developed, and thus saw no harm in letting Apple see it. If they thought it was valuable, they would never have let the Apple contingent in the building. Instead, they probably thought they were screwing Apple by getting virtually free money out of their investment, in exchange for letting Apple see worthless, unmarketable crap.
Eventually Xerox sued Apple
Well, sure, after realizing in horror that they gave away the keys to the kingdom. No matter how much money they made on their investment in Apple, it would have been dwarfed by what they could have made if they had fully exploited the GUI themselves.
Apple never tried to argue in that case that their tour of Xerox entitled them to any rights, by the way.
Well, that goes back to my first point. Nobody could reasonably expect the Apple people to not be influenced by what they saw. Short of erasing their memories after the tour a la "Men in Black," if you want to ensure they won't be influenced by the stuff, you don't let them see it.
And though Xerox didn't grant any rights to Apple, I can only assume there were no NDAs covering the visits, either-- those would have been a potent weapon in the lawsuit, had they existed.
~Philly
Re: It gets good here (Score:2)
Re: It gets good here (Score:2)
Well, that's a trick question. Since Apple believed that Look-n-Feel was legally protected by copyright, it follows that they should have bought the imaginary rights from Xerox.
Re: It gets good here (Score:4, Informative)
Many people don't understand the concept of "look and feel" and focus purely on the appearance of the interface. If you read the article, you would have noticed the point that the Alto's interface was very difficult to use, whereas the Lisa team made usability the primary focus for their interface. While they might have looked similar (overlapping windows and desktop metaphor aside) they had a very different feel. By contrast, Microsoft took much of the "feel" from the Lisa and Macintosh ftp://ftp.cs.umd.edu/pub/hcil/Reports-Abstracts-B
Re: It gets good here (Score:3, Interesting)
At the time there was very little precedent for enforcing intellectual property laws against what we know as a gui and Xerox had no protectible rights to grant that Apple was interested in:
Re: It gets good here (Score:2)
At the time they didn't really have any rights to grant. They owned the look and feel of their interface, but Apple's was quite different. And patent policy at the time held that software and user interface concepts could not be patented (otherwise, there would never have been Lotus or Excel, and we'd probably all be running some version of Visicalc).
Micorsoft settling with Apple (Score:2)
I thought I read somewhere that MS had to settle out of court at some point because some stuff MS did looked too much like Apple's stuff. Perhaps not with Windows 1.0, but with Windows 95 maybe?
I don't know or recall what it was about but back in the late '90s, I'm thinking 1997 or '98 when Apple and Microsoft announced that MS was investing I think it was $200 million in nonvoting Apple stock MS also paid Apple another $200 million to settle a lawsuit Apple brought against MS. This was when MacWorld h
Apple and Xerox PARC (Score:2)
The researchers at PARC had since become leery of outsiders, and stopped giving tours. Steve Jobs, convinced that the technology at PARC could help Apple usher in the eighties, offered Xerox a killer deal. Apple, which was still privately owned at the time, would allow Xerox to invest $1 million, which was sure to soar in value when the company went public in 1981 for two guided tours of PARC's technology. Xerox happily accepted, and gave Steve and a team of engineers from the Lisa project a tour of the tec
Not the first.... (Score:4, Interesting)
The Lisa was the first major one with a sophisticated non-text graphical interface for file access. However, it was not the first to use such an interface at all. Earlier offerings from Apple, Atari, Commodore, etc had many individual programs that had interactive graphic (non-text) interface and control. Probably would be better to say that it was the first commercial offering featuring the early version of today's GUI.
Re:Not the first.... (Score:4, Informative)
The Xerox Star was commercial product. It was marketed to Executives, not average folks. Cost was something like $10,000 (in 1981), if I recall correctly.
It's sort of funny that people make such as big deal about the GUI, when in reality the laser printer was (and still is) equally important. Guess who invented the laser printer? Hint... it starts with a X...
Re:Not the first.... (Score:2)
Probably Xerox, one of the leading makers of xerox machines. I've had xerox machines from both Canon and Xerox :). They've done pretty good for a company that sounds like the name of Zaphod's brother.
Re:Not the first.... (Score:2)
I think you meant photocopier.
Are you the kind of person that calls tissue Kleenex or video game consoles Nintendo? The brand name penetration in American consumerism really deserves a good study one of these days.
For the record I also love how Kraft Mac 'n Cheese is somehow the cheesiest even though it really
Re:Not the first.... (Score:2)
Like everyone else, I call kleenex kleenex, no matter what the brand. Even if it is Kleenex brand Kleenex, with the capital K. Like everyone else, I know Nintendo is a latecomer to the videogame industry, and it is just one "videogame" among many offerings from many companies.
Photocopying was commonly called xeroxing before the Xerox company started to throw fits about it. See this definition page [wordreference.com].
Re:Not the first.... (Score:2)
Re:Not the first.... (Score:2)
Xerox Star... (Score:2)
Re:Not the first.... (Score:3, Interesting)
But the company that made the laser printer into something people would buy started with an A. Xerox had their laser printers but offered little incentive for people to buy them. The Xerox Star came with one but the machine was priced far beyond what anyone would reasonably be expected to pay for a per
Re:Not the first.... (Score:3, Insightful)
You misspelled "Adobe" (wink).
From "Triumph of the Nerds":
Star was $16K; also Lisp machines and PERQ (Score:4, Interesting)
Also, I know of two other windowing workstations that were commercially available in 1981:
The PERQ [wikipedia.org]
Lisp machines [andromeda.com] from LMI and Symbolics
The Lisa was not the first commercial GUI machine, though it probably does hold the title for the first commercial machine under $10K.
You Can't Do That On Television (Score:3, Interesting)
Alasdair: "Oh, Christine!"
Christine: "Yes, Alasdair?"
Alasdair: "Did you know they made a computer called the Lisa?"
Christine: "I hope it doesn't talk!"
(note: Castmember Lisa Ruddy was portrayed as annoyingly, excessively talkative.)
Re:You Can't Do That On Television (Score:2)
P.S. Did you actually remember all the cast members' names, text, etc. or did you google them right now?
I know one cast YCDTOTV member... (Score:2)
The difference between Apple and Microsoft (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The difference between Apple and Microsoft (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The difference between Apple and Microsoft (Score:2)
Re:The difference between Apple and Microsoft (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The difference between Apple and Microsoft (Score:2)
You should also remember that it was IBM that set the hardware requirements for the PC. The original PC had an 8088 with 16K of memory. The original Mac had 68000 with 128K of memory.
The fact is that DOS was a pretty good OS given the limitations of the hardware and the accelerated development schedule.
Re:The difference between Apple and Microsoft (Score:2)
I was curious as to this, because 16k does not seem like enough to even boot DOS 1.0 yet alone run anything. Seemed suspicious. Let's check out the wikipedia, which I realize is not the most acurate source sometimes, but I have a feeling their data on the original IBM PC is pretty good.
The original PC had a version of Microsoft
Re:The difference between Apple and Microsoft (Score:2)
Originally the IBM PC was targetting the Apple II+, and shipped with similar specs and pricing. However, when it started getting adopted by businesses, it was usually loaded out with more memory and storage than the Apple systems. 64K was the maximum memory for an Apple II and the minimum for an IBM. (Oh, and nobody
Apple crippled themselves, not Microsoft. (Score:2)
Not only that, as the sole provider of the hardware they could not innovate fast enough or provide enough variety in configurations to keep up with the pace of the development or need in the PC world.
Microsoft became so large because they rightly focused on only one side of the equation. They didn't have the risk of sitting on hardware. Old software can be discard
timeline (Score:2, Insightful)
Does this have anything to do with Aqua? I don't know the timeline of this. Aqua was a step backwards, not progress: if you think "white on very light blue" is readable, you are kicking usability out the door.
There's a reason that black-on-white has been a standard for readable text for.... let's see.... 4,000 years?
People think... (Score:5, Funny)
Had to leave it plugged in (Score:2)
Re:Had to leave it plugged in (Score:2)
I call BS (Score:3, Funny)
Where? (Score:2)
Re:Where? (Score:2)
Re:I call BS (Score:2)
Well there is probably some truth to that. Not actually reading the code. But If I need to copy the functionality of an other program I usually need to see the program in action. for example Apples Spotlight feature. Now according to Apple marketing it just somehow magically searches your hard drive in a split second. But when you actually get you hands on it you see that it is indexing the files which can ta
Re:I call BS (Score:2)
Still, Morris dancing ninja monkeys sounds cooler.
Stole (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Stole (Score:2)
Re:Stole (Score:2)
I won't argue that it's logical, but as a user I always felt it made sense in some way. Moving the disk to the trash was kind of like saying, "I'm done with this, let's put it away." There's a strange connection between throwing something in a virtual trash can, and then seeing a disk eject from a drive. It always seemed
Re:Stole (Score:2)
Interesting. In OS X to you have to unmount by dragging to trash, in Ubuntu you do a right click and select unmount (or whatever they call it). Suse 9.1 you just "rip it out". Whoo-hoo, sounds like at least one environment gets it right!
Re:Stole (Score:2)
Not necessarily. The sidebar of all Finder windows contains icons for all the mounted devices. For removable media and network shares, there is a grey "eject" button to the right of each icon, which unmounts the device and (if applicable) ejects the CD / DVD / etc.
Windows unmount (Score:2)
getting disk eject right.... (Score:2)
Different floppy drive types (Score:2)
I think that this is why (as another poster mentioned) Microsoft implemented a scheme to enable floppies to be 'ripped-out' and Apple did not.
Also, since folks
Re:Stole (Score:2)
The main problem is that the only quick operation was apple-E to eject the disk, which did not forget about the contents. This caused it to (due to various other bugs and misfeatures) to randomly ask for you to re-insert some disk you ejected long ago. The official method of "eject and forget" was difficult (I can't even remember what it was)
Re:Reason for that (Score:2)
Yes, they finally got around to taking the OS game seriously with OS-X. This is one of the reasons they are not the "Apple? Oh, is that company still around? Didn't they go bankrupt in 1987?" company anymore.
Re:Reason for that (Score:2)
The reason for it, for those who don't remember, was that the original Macintosh had no hard drive. Thus, the only way to copy files between floppies was to create some representation of an "ejected" disk on the desktop. To copy: you'd eject the disk, put in a new one, a
Re:Stole (Score:2)
The Xerox machine, as well as Lisp machines (which nobody here seems to be mentioning) used tiled windows. The most obvious difference with even the first versions of X is overlapping windows.
Apple invented less than you think... (Score:3, Insightful)
Pull-down menus were a hack to let them have a single-button mouse. Everyone else used contextual menus, and even Apple has in a backhanded way adopted them... and before you go all Fitt's Law on me, don't forget that there are *5* "best targets" on the screen for Fitt's Law, and "right under the mouse" is one of them.
Overlapping windows were NOT an Apple innov
Lisa Cut Apple's Throat (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Lisa Cut Apple's Throat (Score:5, Interesting)
Back around 1990 or so he bought a Mac IIfx. That thing was trippy scary fast for the time, and it cost him a HUGE pile of cash - something like $12,000. Which is a huge amount of money for a computer by todays standards and just short of extortionate back in 1990. However it had that weird 64 pin memory, so upping the RAM cost a freakin' fortune, and it was never used again, which meant that this machine was a $13,000 DOORSTOP. That pissed him off. But he was a Believer, and he went back to the Kool-Aid trough again in summer of 1995 and bought a Quadra 950 for about $8,000. It was discontinued a few months later, and at the time with no realistic upgrade path, except to spend another $8000 on a 9500.
At that point he said "FUCK APPLE" - he had invested over $20,000 on TWO computers, both of which were doorstops. He was able to strip the 950 for some parts, at least. Since then, he's been a Wintel Guy ever since.
Apple has a habit of doing that - building extremely expensive machines that have no useful upgrade path. Now that computers are so friggin cheap, upgrape path doesn't mean that much, but back in 1990 it really did.
I bought an LC (or was it an LC-II? I don't remember...) back in 1991 because it was a colour macintosh for less than $2000, which I thought was FANTASTIC. I think it had 8 megs of RAM. But, with no upgrade path, it was useless after a few years, and then I bought my Quadra 650 for about $1700. The Quadra was great - it worked like a champ for years and I finally sold it to someone who is still using it for word processing running Word 5, FreeHand 5, and Quark 3 to this very day.
Apple's crude discontinuation of Lisa was just the first in a series of major customer mis-steps by Apple. (full disclosure: both of my Apple computers died in April, so now I'm running a cheapy Wintel box, but only until the MacIntel boxen arrive. Then I'll get a MacIntel powerbook. YAY!!! I look forward to getting back to OSX. Windows makes my day long and grim, and the software I use precludes Linux, for now.)
RS
Re:Lisa Cut Apple's Throat (Score:2)
The Quadra 950 came out in 1992 [lowendmac.com] - considering the PowerMac 8100 [lowendmac.com] was already available in 1994, one would say the writing's on the wall when it comes to 68k-based Macs.
Your friend's whining is like someone who buys a dual-CPU PowerMac G5 2.7GHz now, only to whine when the Intel-based Macs come out. You know what's coming, it might still be wo
Re:Lisa Cut Apple's Throat (Score:2)
Your second paragraph describes *exactly* why I didn't replace my dead apples with PPC machines. I can't afford to dump serious money into a PPC. I tend to keep my computers for a long time, and while Apple and Apple fanboys are all saying "PPC
Oh, it's even more subtle than that. (Score:2, Interesting)
Raskin had worked with user interface design as a professor for a decade before he started work with Apple. Xerox and Raskin pretty much drew from the same sources while both of them obviously had ideas on their own (Raskin didn't like the mouse, for instance, prefering his own LEAP model). The main idea behind the trip to Xerox was not to be inspired by Xerox, but for Jobs to see in practice what Raskin had been talking about. Read more here: Holes in the histories [raskincenter.org]
Lisa's floppy drives (Score:3, Interesting)
Fond Lisa Memories (Score:3, Interesting)
My mother worked in a government office from the mid 70s well through to the 80s when she retired. The office was in a nearby industrial park to which we could walk from our house. Occasional visits to this typical boring office were livened up by the fact that it had computers in it. Usually they were several-years-behind things, such as mainframes with line printer interfaces and those old reel-to-reel tape drives. However, the office actually purchased a number of Lisa machines, possibly as many as 10. Ultimately they proved to be nothing more than red-ink generators as technology moved quickly and passed them by, but I have fond memories of popping by to see my Mom and the Lisas. I came by that office occasionally and watched the PC grow up; her office mates watched me grow up. It never seems like a special thing until you look back on it.
Xerox is a story in itself... (Score:3, Interesting)
Overlapping Windows (Score:2)
Re:Overlapping Windows (Urban Legend?) (Score:2)
I doubt the reliability of this story... This must have been a very early version of Smalltalk if it didn't have overlapping windows.
http://squab.no-ip.com:8080/collab/uploads/61/smal ltalk-72-1977.jpg [no-ip.com]
http://squab.no-ip.com:8080/collab/uploads/6 [no-ip.com]
Re:Overlapping Windows (Urban Legend?) (Score:2)
Tim
trying to rewrite history, eh? (Score:2)
Oh, the lost chances! (Score:3, Insightful)
Yay for totally not getting it.
Re:Oh, the lost chances! (Score:2)
The same could be also said about Bell Labs.
Re:Xerox? (Score:2)
Re:It's like deja-vu all over again (Score:2)