Apple goes for Be instead of Next
Apple goes for Be instead of Next
I heard about BeOS in the late 90s, and I thought it was really interesting.
Before BeOS, I used GeoWorks and loved it. Then again, I'd been using GEOS on my C64 and GEOS 128 on my C128 for years.
It wasn't a full OS, more of a "GUI workbench with apps".
Nightfox wrote to Skylar <=-
I'd heard about GeOS, but I never used it. I think I first heard about GeOS around 1995 or 1996, and by then I'm not sure if it was actively developed anymore..?
From what I heard, it sounded like GeOS performed better than Windows
at the time. I often thought it was a bummer that Windows became the dominant computer platform when there were better alternatives
available. I thought OS/2 was good too..
GEOS for the 64 was the basis for QuantumLink, the predecessor to AOL. It was an interesting GUI at the time.
From what I heard, it sounded like GeOS performed better than Windows at the time.
I often thought it was a bummer that Windows became the dominant
computer platform when there were better alternatives available.
I thought OS/2 was good too..
GEOS for the 64 was the basis for QuantumLink, the predecessor to AOL.
It was an interesting GUI at the time.
It was (and still is) amazing what GEOS could do on a 1 Mhz 8-bit 6510 machine with 64KB. There were not a lot of applications available. But for WYSIWYG word processing and page layout, it was sweet.
Same here. Although I grew up using a Commodore 64 and laughing at the limitations of a "PC compatible" and the low quality of PC games available at the time. By the time I was in high school, many of my (older) geek friends had an Amiga.
I thought OS/2 was good too..
I bought OS/2 and gave it a try around 1993. I thought it had potential but we had major driver compatility issues. By then I'd been programming for MS-DOS using Turbo Pascal and Turbo C++ for a few years and much preferred staying in DOS when using a "PC".
Skylar wrote to Nightfox <=-
GeoWorks performed *so* much better on a 286 than Windows 3.0 or 3.1
ever could. I had high hopes, but it never gained traction.
I often thought it was a bummer that Windows became the dominant
computer platform when there were better alternatives available.
I bought OS/2 and gave it a try around 1993. I thought it had potential but we had major driver compatility issues. By then I'd been
programming for MS-DOS using Turbo Pascal and Turbo C++ for a few years and much preferred staying in DOS when using a "PC".
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