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The Alto is the first system to pull together all of the elements of the modern Graphical User Interface Notable Features:
3-button mouse
Bit-mapped display
The use of graphical windows
Ethernet network -
New features: double-clickable icons, overlapping windows, dialog boxes
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Pull down menus and menu bars
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Windows can not be overlapped, but are instead "tiled".
Windows are not allowed to cover an area at the bottom of the screen that is reserved for "iconized" programs. -
Digital Research cripples the desktop application so Apple will not sue
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640*480*256 color with 24 bit color card available
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Finally has resizable / overlapping windows and new windowing controls
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Included a 25 MHz '30 processor, 8 MB RAM, 250 MB optical disk drive, math coprocessor, digital processor for real time sound, fax modem, and a 17" monitor Price: $6500
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New 3d effects, a revised menu system and many other improvements
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New features: Program Manager shell
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Features a new "Workplace Shell", an object oriented user interface that is heavily integrated with the rest of the OS
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Images for backgrounds, color pallet remapping
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available for Intel, Power PC, Alpha, and MIPS systems
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best-selling software in that period with 1.25 million copies in less than 2 weeks
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Internet Explorer Web browser application takes over the role of the Windows shell, advertising right on the desktop, entire help system replaced by Internet Explorer
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A very Windows 9x like environment for Linux
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Features No Internet Explorer or advertising, all the hardware support of Windows 98, faster boot time, and the more responsive Windows 95 shell
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The Internet Explorer web browser application finally takes over the Windows NT UI
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3D hardware-rendered user interface like MacOS X.
Bundles IE 7, unremovable as always
Increased Digital Restrictions Management that tries to prevent playback or duplication of unlicensed audio and video material -
You can "pin" icons to the Taskbar.
Ribbons replace menus in some applications. -
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