Talk:WYSIWYG: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz
(Xerox PARC was the first WYSIWYG, I believe -- the Xerox Star commercial product.)
imported>Hayford Peirce
(→‎you must be very young: you're right, of course)
Line 6: Line 6:


:Actually, the WYSYWIG concept preceded Apple. It was developed at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, the premier laboratory for developing brilliant concepts that the parent company had no idea how to sell. A word processor called the Xerox Star was commercially available in, as I remember, the late seventies, for about $10,000 then-current dollars. I saw prototypes at Xerox about 1976. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 08:09, 19 July 2010 (UTC)
:Actually, the WYSYWIG concept preceded Apple. It was developed at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, the premier laboratory for developing brilliant concepts that the parent company had no idea how to sell. A word processor called the Xerox Star was commercially available in, as I remember, the late seventies, for about $10,000 then-current dollars. I saw prototypes at Xerox about 1976. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 08:09, 19 July 2010 (UTC)
::Yes, I read about that in the mid-fifties -- most of all computer (personal) advances came from there. I was writing above as a 1985-MS-DOS user.  Wordperfect was a miracle compared to Wordstar! [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 16:29, 19 July 2010 (UTC)

Revision as of 10:29, 19 July 2010

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
To learn how to update the categories for this article, see here. To update categories, edit the metadata template.
 Definition Acronym that stands for "What you see is what you get" [d] [e]
Checklist and Archives
 Workgroup category Computers [Editors asked to check categories]
 Talk Archive none  English language variant American English

you must be very young

When WordPerfect and other programs back in the mid-1980s introduced wizzywig or whatever, it had NOTHING at all to do with drop and drag. That obviously didn't exist. I doubt if anyone in the world had even heard of the term, except maybe someone at Apple. Could be. But this is what distinguished WordPerfect, say, from Wordstar, the premier word-processor at the time. Made WP the #1 processor overnight.... Hayford Peirce 04:39, 19 July 2010 (UTC)

Actually, the WYSYWIG concept preceded Apple. It was developed at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, the premier laboratory for developing brilliant concepts that the parent company had no idea how to sell. A word processor called the Xerox Star was commercially available in, as I remember, the late seventies, for about $10,000 then-current dollars. I saw prototypes at Xerox about 1976. Howard C. Berkowitz 08:09, 19 July 2010 (UTC)
Yes, I read about that in the mid-fifties -- most of all computer (personal) advances came from there. I was writing above as a 1985-MS-DOS user. Wordperfect was a miracle compared to Wordstar! Hayford Peirce 16:29, 19 July 2010 (UTC)