And on PC too... It was the big "Productivity Suite" coming with Amstrad PC 1512, which made it very popular in Europe. SunOS is *not* a graphical environment, it's a pure Unix system, with a lot of BSD in it. The original graphical interface coming with SunOS on their pricey X terminals was called OpenLook (or OpenWindow), and from SunOS 5, you could use another window manager called "CDE" featuring "Motif". Motif was the paradigm also used on the Commodore 64 in GEOS, ported later on PC as PCGEOS and bundled with Commodore PCs for a short time.
@@RegisMichelLeclerc GEM was at its time an especially on the ST range of computers quite a force to be reckoned with. Especially in hires mode it had quite a bunch of reasonable killer pass like Calamus SL, Notator, ProLogic, Cubase, Signum ... Later versions of GEM/TOS featured also Multitasking, SVGA-res, there were even compatible Clones/forks like MagiC, Neo desk etc.
@@dannyhilarious I know! I remember the time when GEM was competing with Windows 1.0 (and even 2.0) on EGA displays, but that was before the era of the SoundBlaster, and it was mostly productivity tools (word processor, spreadsheet, "Superbase" database and a "Draft" CAD solution). It was pretty successful, at the time. I even wrote a text-mode lookalike in 6502 assembler on Oric Atmos to do file operations on floppies mimicking the TOS, with animated windows, etc... It never left my home, though,
While a product called MouseDesk did exist for 8-bit Apple IIs, the product depicted here is the GS/OS Finder. GS/OS was a full operating system, developed by Apple, and it ran on the Apple IIgs only. It was roughly equivalent to early versions of the Macintosh system software but with slightly better APIs and support for color graphics.
On the Amiga, Workbench is just the graphical file manager. The GUI is is called Intuition and the command line interface was Amiga DOS (not DOS, as in MS-DOS). Amiga DOS was ported from TRIPOS, a would-be Unix competitor, made in Cambridge in tbe U.K. You could replace Workbench all together, and many did. Amiga OS (all of these above elements together) had something that only one other OS, Unix, had at the time: true preemptive multitasking.
*Amiga OS (all of these above elements together) had something that only one other OS, Unix, had at the time: true preemptive multitasking* no, there were other OSes which had preemptive multitasking in that time, some even true preemptive multitasking that Amiga never had. Im talking about MP/M-86 and Concurrent CP/M-86, ConcurrentDOS later known as DR.DOS, GNU, QDOS on Sinclair QL, MAGIC and MiNT on ATARI ST line, to name some. Amiga DOS has no memory protection so it is not a true preemptive multitasking.
Well IBM PC users could install QNX to get that very early on, with the bonus of having a UNIX like setup. Also we had XENIX and a lot of other systems.
@@megol0 you are totally wrong and Guru who meditates is my witness. Amiga DOS is pseudo preemptive multitasking. The memory protection is a must so the programs cannot rewrite other programs memory addresses. Also if some program crashes only its task is frozen and has to be terminated or reset, all other tasks are still running, this is not how Amiga DOS works. The multitasking on Amiga works only if the programs are following the guidelines (end even then often not), in real preemptive multitasking system any program can be tasked by task manager.
@@megol0 *Well IBM PC users could install QNX to get that very early on* yes I still have the QNiX floppy somewhere. But I remember QNX being a thing of mid to late 90s. OS+GUI+web browser all booted from a single floppy... Edit: XENIX is UNIX, so in case of XENIX the OP is spot on.
@@djopensourceDeskMate was shipped with the Tandy 1000 and GEOS was shipped with the Commodore Plus/4 and 128. You have to be aware that not all machines were DOS machines
@@djopensource you answered my request that the GEM for DOS was just a addon, and here you say you used only GUIs that came bundled with OS, which GEM for DOS was, GEM cannot run without DOS on PC.
I was at Xerox UK in London and worked extensively with the Xerox Star, installing networks and training users. I think the GUI would stand up today as a Linux Desktop Environment (but with the optional addition of colour.
@@djopensource There were two versions one with a 10MB Haed disk and the other with a huge (for the time) 29MB hard disk, and they used the fragile 8" floppies.There was sa scripting language called Cusp that you could use to make 'buttons' embedded in a document do various actions. like opening a related document or eyou could even write a script that deleted all the non password prorected files on the machine (or even all machines on the network) Don't try this at work!. The tower case did get warm and vibrate slightly, I once left a cup of milk on one overnight and it was yogurt by morning.
@@djopensource I'm not planning to visit Athens this year, but probably will next rear in the spring. Meantime we could maybe do something over Facebook Messenger video chat or zoom.
MSX-View was released for the MSX TurboR, which was released in 1990 and not in 1984. Even the predecessor of MSX-View (Halnote) was only released in 1987.
"this was the first time that winblows were loaded automatically on boot" and that alone got me to subscribe. I hope ya do a followup and continue to refer to the tiny limp computer company's OS as winblows 🤣
You also forgot GEOS which was the first 8-bit graphical system for the C64 (not counting Logo of course). en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GEOS_(8-bit_operating_system)
Atari ST came with GEM had hi Res support that was butter smooth. The regular GEM on a TV or standard monitor was an ugly combination, but the hi Res black and white version the enabler of many application types such as music creation, DTP, word processing at a professional level.
@@djopensource you missed a lot of systems, like GEM, GEM for DOS, Win1, Win2, GEOS, the AT&T UNIX PC GUI, VisiON, Sharp SX-Window, to name a few just from 80s...
@@djopensource GEM on ST was in the ROM no addon at all, GEOS is not addon. All those UNIX GUI systems you presented (IRIS, Solaris) were addons then as well, as was the Linux GUI. Amiga Workbench not an addon, MSX View, Apple II desktop not an addon, really? Dont see any logic behind your statement.
Wow!!! PERQ and Oberon seem awesome and I will include them if I make another video! Thanks! VisiON is a GUI for DOS, not a standalone, therefor not included purposely.
Hi, I'm confused about your thumbnail picture for this video. What do you mean by "Os' " ("OS" with that random-looking apostrophe on the end)? It seems that you were trying to make the possessive form but left out the lowercase s (with that being an initial abbreviation) and the thing that would belong to the OS. So which thing that belongs to the old OS with a GUI were you trying to refer to there? In other words, an/the "old OS'[s]..." _what_ "...with a GUI?"
You forgot GEM on the Atari ST.
And on PC too... It was the big "Productivity Suite" coming with Amstrad PC 1512, which made it very popular in Europe.
SunOS is *not* a graphical environment, it's a pure Unix system, with a lot of BSD in it. The original graphical interface coming with SunOS on their pricey X terminals was called OpenLook (or OpenWindow), and from SunOS 5, you could use another window manager called "CDE" featuring "Motif". Motif was the paradigm also used on the Commodore 64 in GEOS, ported later on PC as PCGEOS and bundled with Commodore PCs for a short time.
@@RegisMichelLeclerc GEM was at its time an especially on the ST range of computers quite a force to be reckoned with. Especially in hires mode it had quite a bunch of reasonable killer pass like Calamus SL, Notator, ProLogic, Cubase, Signum ...
Later versions of GEM/TOS featured also Multitasking, SVGA-res, there were even compatible Clones/forks like MagiC, Neo desk etc.
@@dannyhilarious I know! I remember the time when GEM was competing with Windows 1.0 (and even 2.0) on EGA displays, but that was before the era of the SoundBlaster, and it was mostly productivity tools (word processor, spreadsheet, "Superbase" database and a "Draft" CAD solution). It was pretty successful, at the time.
I even wrote a text-mode lookalike in 6502 assembler on Oric Atmos to do file operations on floppies mimicking the TOS, with animated windows, etc... It never left my home, though,
Yep. GEM was the first I came across. Used it on an old 286 PC doing an Open University course! Came on 5.25" floppys!
While a product called MouseDesk did exist for 8-bit Apple IIs, the product depicted here is the GS/OS Finder. GS/OS was a full operating system, developed by Apple, and it ran on the Apple IIgs only. It was roughly equivalent to early versions of the Macintosh system software but with slightly better APIs and support for color graphics.
Was hoping to see Visi On, Digital Research GEM and Amiga Workbench 2.0
On the Amiga, Workbench is just the graphical file manager. The GUI is is called Intuition and the command line interface was Amiga DOS (not DOS, as in MS-DOS). Amiga DOS was ported from TRIPOS, a would-be Unix competitor, made in Cambridge in tbe U.K.
You could replace Workbench all together, and many did.
Amiga OS (all of these above elements together) had something that only one other OS, Unix, had at the time: true preemptive multitasking.
*Amiga OS (all of these above elements together) had something that only one other OS, Unix, had at the time: true preemptive multitasking*
no, there were other OSes which had preemptive multitasking in that time, some even true preemptive multitasking that Amiga never had.
Im talking about MP/M-86 and Concurrent CP/M-86, ConcurrentDOS later known as DR.DOS, GNU, QDOS on Sinclair QL, MAGIC and MiNT on ATARI ST line, to name some.
Amiga DOS has no memory protection so it is not a true preemptive multitasking.
Well IBM PC users could install QNX to get that very early on, with the bonus of having a UNIX like setup. Also we had XENIX and a lot of other systems.
@@madigorfkgoogle9349 Memory protection have nothing to do with preemptive multitasking. Yes, I'm saying Linus Torvalds can be totally wrong.
@@megol0 you are totally wrong and Guru who meditates is my witness. Amiga DOS is pseudo preemptive multitasking. The memory protection is a must so the programs cannot rewrite other programs memory addresses. Also if some program crashes only its task is frozen and has to be terminated or reset, all other tasks are still running, this is not how Amiga DOS works.
The multitasking on Amiga works only if the programs are following the guidelines (end even then often not), in real preemptive multitasking system any program can be tasked by task manager.
@@megol0 *Well IBM PC users could install QNX to get that very early on*
yes I still have the QNiX floppy somewhere. But I remember QNX being a thing of mid to late 90s. OS+GUI+web browser all booted from a single floppy...
Edit: XENIX is UNIX, so in case of XENIX the OP is spot on.
Wow this has got to be one of the best GUI videos I've ever found on the internet, ANYWHERE, let alone...TH-cam.. THANKYOU!
Aww, where's Tandy Deskmate and GEOS
Was deskmate shipped with DOS? No. Only GUIs bundled with OS are mentioned here.
@@djopensourceDeskMate was shipped with the Tandy 1000 and GEOS was shipped with the Commodore Plus/4 and 128. You have to be aware that not all machines were DOS machines
@@djopensource you answered my request that the GEM for DOS was just a addon, and here you say you used only GUIs that came bundled with OS, which GEM for DOS was, GEM cannot run without DOS on PC.
@@madigorfkgoogle9349 Correct, Gem was not a standalone, it required dos, and that is why I didn't include it.
I came here expecting GEOS. So sad....
I was at Xerox UK in London and worked extensively with the Xerox Star, installing networks and training users. I think the GUI would stand up today as a Linux Desktop Environment (but with the optional addition of colour.
I am fascinated by the Xeror Star.... Write us some more things about your experience.
@@djopensource There were two versions one with a 10MB Haed disk and the other with a huge (for the time) 29MB hard disk, and they used the fragile 8" floppies.There was sa scripting language called Cusp that you could use to make 'buttons' embedded in a document do various actions. like opening a related document or eyou could even write a script that deleted all the non password prorected files on the machine (or even all machines on the network) Don't try this at work!. The tower case did get warm and vibrate slightly, I once left a cup of milk on one overnight and it was yogurt by morning.
@@daviddunmore7076 If you ever visit Athens I would like an interview and make a video about this machine.
@@djopensource I'm not planning to visit Athens this year, but probably will next rear in the spring. Meantime we could maybe do something over Facebook Messenger video chat or zoom.
DeskMate for TRS-80 computers (1984). Windows 1.0 for PC (1985), GEM for DOS/Atari (1985), ICE for Sinclair QL (1985), GEOS for C64 (1986).
PS, I did comparison of mid 80s 16-bit machines titled: Mac vs Amiga vs Atari vs QL. (Nov 2022).
One very important OS forgotten was OS-9 for the TRS-80 Color Computer. Figures that this was SNUBBED. An updated version is available now.
No, this didn't have a GUI attached. Only OSes with GUIs are mentioned. Thanks.
@@djopensourceit did have a gui. It was called Multi-Vue. It was created by microware the same company that made os-9.
@djopensource The GUI for OS-9 was called multview. I used it on OS-9 level 2 on the Color computer 3
I think the piano keys on the left on the very first machines look interesting and I wonder why they got removed in later computers
Amiga was the first computer that really made it right. Multitasking and great resources management wasn't a joke on this machine.
MSX-View was released for the MSX TurboR, which was released in 1990 and not in 1984. Even the predecessor of MSX-View (Halnote) was only released in 1987.
I messed up. Classic.
i just know GUI must be really hard battle between companies...
i remember when i was young, ive always wanted to have those computers. apple was known as macintosh back then.
"this was the first time that winblows were loaded automatically on boot"
and that alone got me to subscribe. I hope ya do a followup and continue to refer to the tiny limp computer company's OS as winblows 🤣
Geos on the C64 and Geos 128 missing (and KDE if you made it to 98). But nice compilation.
I think Geos on the c64 required PRODOS?, that is why I didn't include it. But thank you.
@@djopensource No it did not require anything additional.
I tried most of these back in the early 2000s
firdst unix X GUI in the early 80's, first irix in 84, amigaOS, OS/2, Thomson, etc. skipped the important ones and many more on the 70s.
What happens to Windows 1.0 ?
You also forgot GEOS which was the first 8-bit graphical system for the C64 (not counting Logo of course).
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GEOS_(8-bit_operating_system)
Atari ST came with GEM had hi Res support that was butter smooth.
The regular GEM on a TV or standard monitor was an ugly combination, but the hi Res black and white version the enabler of many application types such as music creation, DTP, word processing at a professional level.
How did I miss the atari st!? Poor work :(
@@djopensource Nah still good man - thank you for putting it together.
@@djopensource you missed a lot of systems, like GEM, GEM for DOS, Win1, Win2, GEOS, the AT&T UNIX PC GUI, VisiON, Sharp SX-Window, to name a few just from 80s...
@@madigorfkgoogle9349 No those were all addons, not operating systems with GUIs attached.
@@djopensource GEM on ST was in the ROM no addon at all, GEOS is not addon.
All those UNIX GUI systems you presented (IRIS, Solaris) were addons then as well, as was the Linux GUI. Amiga Workbench not an addon, MSX View, Apple II desktop not an addon, really? Dont see any logic behind your statement.
What was that pad on the left side of the keyboard of the NLS?
I was expecting to see the operating system of the LISP Machines here.
I also used Sun View a lot.
No love for PERQ, VisiOn, Apollo, Medos or Oberon ?
Wow!!! PERQ and Oberon seem awesome and I will include them if I make another video! Thanks! VisiON is a GUI for DOS, not a standalone, therefor not included purposely.
Great video, I would like how did work that device at 0:19
GEOS !!!!! Add it.
Hi, I'm confused about your thumbnail picture for this video. What do you mean by "Os' " ("OS" with that random-looking apostrophe on the end)? It seems that you were trying to make the possessive form but left out the lowercase s (with that being an initial abbreviation) and the thing that would belong to the OS. So which thing that belongs to the old OS with a GUI were you trying to refer to there? In other words, an/the "old OS'[s]..." _what_ "...with a GUI?"
What are the advantages of an operating system being oject oriented?
I can’t believe that xerox copied apple… oh wait 😂 as the dishonest jobs once said “good artists copy and great artists steal” 😂
Where is ATARI TOS/GEM ?
Where's Windows 1.0 (1985) ?
Unix system vee, haha
Most of those are as good as the ones today
no chapter on the early days of X? 😕
Nice
what has to be thought about is multi-application (multi task) systems...
No motif?
Was a preccesor of xerox alto os ?
Apollo Domain
are you Greek... very nice video...
GEOS for C64?
Volume too Low
Where's Plan 9?
In outer space?
If it weren't for the almost imperceptible Indian accent, then this would be a perfect video
Nothing wrong with the Indian accent.
7.5.5 came out in 1996! It even says so in the readme file which you opened! LOL It was only 7.0 that came out in 1991! C'mon man!!
There are a lot of mistakes in the videos unfortunatelly. Sorry.
Atari ST ToS
early operating systems with gui's, in other words companies that apple and microsoft ripped off ideas from
.....aka ......Mac OS LOL
He said “Winblows” @9:38 😂
this was hard to listen to and easier to click away from. nope nope nope nope
And yet you felt compelled to leave a comment.
@Jeordie. Funny I was thinking the same about your comment. 😂
Moist