Path: gmdzi!unido!fauern!ira.uka.de!yale.edu!qt.cs.utexas.edu!cs.utexas.edu! usc!apple!...@apple.com From: c...@apple.com (Chris Warren) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <16288@goofy.Apple.COM> Date: 16 Sep 91 22:08:29 GMT Sender: use...@Apple.COM Organization: Apple Computer Lines: 43 Dear fellow netters, I am an human interface designer at Apple Computer who is doing some research on people's mental model of networks. To this end I wanted to throw up the following questions for public responses. I am not interested in any particular answer. In fact, I want is to to get as many different answers as possible, no matter how strange. Anyway, here are the questions. Suppose you are trying to explain the network to someone who is completely unfamiliar with computers. 1) How would you describe it to them? 2) Would you use any analogies to objects or ideas in the real world? 3) How would you describe various tasks that people use networks for? (Netnews, Telnet, FTP, Hooking up to a database, EMail, Printing to a shared printer, etc) 4) If you answered yes to question 2 then how do these tasks fit into the analogy? 5) How would you explain to someone how to find something on the net that they were looking for? (Example the ftp site that has program X) 6) Now if the user had some experience using applications on a computer but no network experience, would any of your answers to the above change? Optional background question 7) What 3 computers do you use the most, and what do you use them for? Please reply via EMail to c...@apple.com Also please post any analogies that you come up with. I am interested in seeing what kind of discussion develops. Thanks in advance Chris Warren
Path: gmdzi!unido!mcsun!sunic!ugle.unit.no!alf.uib.no!buboo From: bu...@alf.uib.no (Ove Ruben R Olsen) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <1991Sep17.073853.15203@alf.uib.no> Date: 17 Sep 91 07:38:53 GMT References: <16288@goofy.Apple.COM> Sender: Gnarfer Followup-To: alt.folklore.computers Organization: University of Bergen, Norway Lines: 36 In article <16...@goofy.Apple.COM> c...@apple.com (Chris Warren) writes: >Dear fellow netters, > I am an human interface designer at Apple Computer who >is doing some research on people's mental model of networks. To this end >I wanted to throw up the following questions for public responses. I am not >interested in any particular answer. In fact, I want is to to get as many >different answers as possible, no matter how strange. > Hmm this smells like a very cheap way of doing researh on Human Interface !!!! In my oppinion I would suggest that, YOU, the people boycot this. If APPLE (a company with huge amounts of money) wan't to do researh, let them pay the price. [ Stuff deleted ] > >Thanks in advance > Chris Warren Say NO to User Interface Copyright ! Boycot Lotus, Apple, Xerox, Ashton-Tate, and others ! \Ruben. PS: I'm not a communist, I just don't fancy monopolies. In fact communism is just like monopolism: One little group is controlling the rest of the comunity. Would YOU, as a person with FREE-WILL and THOUGH like that ONE company controlled HOW you should to your WORK ? DS -- Ove Ruben R Olsen, Proffessional VI user. EMAIL: rube...@viggo.blh.no Also known as "The Gnarfer from Hell". (Registred character of ORRO.) On IRC as: Gnarfer. IRC-Admin at Bergen Edu College and Univ of Bergen
Path: gmdzi!unido!math.fu-berlin.de!fauern!ira.uka.de!sol.ctr.columbia.edu! spool.mu.edu!munnari.oz.au!bunyip.cc.uq.oz.au!uqcspe!cs.uq.oz.au!matthew From: matt...@cs.uq.oz.au (Matthew McDonald) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Summary: Don't do it! Message-ID: <3822@uqcspe.cs.uq.oz.au> Date: 17 Sep 91 12:57:48 GMT References: <16288@goofy.Apple.COM> Sender: n...@cs.uq.oz.au Reply-To: matt...@cs.uq.oz.au Organization: Computer Science Department, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia Lines: 14 In article <16...@goofy.Apple.COM> c...@apple.com (Chris Warren) writes: >Dear fellow netters, > I am an human interface designer at Apple Computer who >is doing some research on people's mental model of networks. To this end >I wanted to throw up the following questions for public responses. I am not >interested in any particular answer. In fact, I want is to to get as many >different answers as possible, no matter how strange. Hi all, I'd just like to say, please don't help this person from apple. Support the Free Software Foundation and boycott Apple. Just My 2 cents worth... Regards, Matthew.
Path: gmdzi!unido!unidui!math.fu-berlin.de!ira.uka.de!yale.edu!think.com!barmar From: bar...@think.com (Barry Margolin) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <1991Sep17.161322.2488@Think.COM> Date: 17 Sep 91 16:13:22 GMT References: <16288@goofy.Apple.COM> <1991Sep17.073853.15203@alf.uib.no> Sender: n...@Think.COM Reply-To: bar...@think.com Organization: Thinking Machines Corporation, Cambridge MA, USA Lines: 21 In article <1991Sep17.073853.15...@alf.uib.no> bu...@alf.uib.no (Ove Ruben R Olsen) writes: >In my oppinion I would suggest that, YOU, the people boycot this. >If APPLE (a company with huge amounts of money) wan't to do researh, let >them pay the price. Just to play Devil's Advocate: Isn't one of the justifications sometimes given for user interface copyrights that it is expensive to develop them, because of the research and testing involved? Thus, if you force Apple to "pay the price", aren't you giving them more ammunition? What bothered me most about Apple's posting was that they sent it as separate postings to about a half-dozen newsgroups, instead of as a single, cross-posted article. If they're going to use the net as a resource, they should at least learn how to use it properly. -- Barry Margolin, Thinking Machines Corp. bar...@think.com {uunet,harvard}!think!barmar
Path: gmdzi!unido!mcsun!uunet!midway!midway.uchicago.edu!francis From: fran...@zaphod.uchicago.edu (Francis Stracke) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <FRANCIS.91Sep17191356@math.zaphod.uchicago.edu> Date: 18 Sep 91 01:13:56 GMT References: <16288@goofy.Apple.COM> <3822@uqcspe.cs.uq.oz.au> Sender: n...@midway.uchicago.edu (NewsMistress) Reply-To: fran...@zaphod.uchicago.edu Organization: Mathematics Department, University of Chicago Lines: 29 In-Reply-To: matthew@cs.uq.oz.au's message of 17 Sep 91 12: 57:48 GMT In article <3...@uqcspe.cs.uq.oz.au> matt...@cs.uq.oz.au (Matthew McDonald) writes: >In article <16...@goofy.Apple.COM> c...@apple.com (Chris Warren) writes: [asks for HI help] >Hi all, > I'd just like to say, please don't help this person from apple. >Support the Free Software Foundation and boycott Apple. Just My 2 cents worth. More like 2 kopeks. I have yet to hear a rational explanation of why people expect to be able to get good software if *nobody* gets paid for it. (Can somebody please explain how the FSF people manage to keep eating?) Apple may do some annoying things--let me rephrase that: Apple *does* do some annoying things--but the Mac is a wonderful machine, and I have no intention of boycotting it. For one thing, its GUI is the only one I've ever used that doesn't feel like it was designed by a band of preschool children. Apple's Human Interface people do great work, and (as near as I can tell) share their research, if not the specific design decisions made as a result. -- /============================================================================\ | Francis Stracke | My opinions are my own. I don't steal them.| | Department of Mathematics |=============================================| | University of Chicago | Many people would sooner die than think. | | fran...@zaphod.uchicago.edu | In fact, they do. -- Bertrand Russell | \============================================================================/
Path: gmdzi!unido!mcsun!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sdd.hp.com! news.cs.indiana.edu!lynx!nmsu!opus!larry From: la...@peak.psl.nmsu (Larry Cunningham) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <LARRY.91Sep17163935@peak.psl.nmsu> Date: 17 Sep 91 22:39:35 GMT References: <16288@goofy.Apple.COM> <3822@uqcspe.cs.uq.oz.au> Sender: n...@NMSU.Edu Organization: New Mexico State University, Physical Science Laboratory Lines: 15 In-reply-to: matthew@cs.uq.oz.au's message of 17 Sep 91 12:57:48 GMT Gee, isn't Apple that company who tries to sue everyone for copying =their= graphics interface, which they stole from Xerox in the first place? Now an employee of theirs has the gall to try to conduct Apple's design research via network. Let's =don't= help Apple do anything, huh? Nothing personal, Matt. But Apple can go suck an egg. "Yeh, Buddy.. | lcunn...@nmsu.edu (Larry Cunningham) | _~~_ I've got your COMPUTER! | % Physical Science Laboratory | (O)(-) Right HERE!!" | New Mexico State University | /..\ (computer THIS!) | Las Cruces, New Mexico, USA 88003 | <> -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Disclaimer: Opinions expressed here are CORRECT, mine, and not PSLs or NMSUs..
Path: gmdzi!unido!unidui!math.fu-berlin.de!fauern!ira.uka.de!yale.edu! qt.cs.utexas.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wupost!micro-heart-of-gold.mit.edu! news.bbn.com!bbn.com!saustin From: saus...@bbn.com (Steve Austin) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <66377@bbn.BBN.COM> Date: 18 Sep 91 15:15:07 GMT References: <16288@goofy.Apple.COM> <3822@uqcspe.cs.uq.oz.au> <FRANCIS.91Sep17191356@math.zaphod.uchicago.edu> Sender: n...@bbn.com Lines: 27 fran...@zaphod.uchicago.edu (Francis Stracke) writes: ->More like 2 kopeks. I have yet to hear a rational explanation of why ->people expect to be able to get good software if *nobody* gets paid ->for it. (Can somebody please explain how the FSF people manage to ->keep eating?) ->Apple may do some annoying things--let me rephrase that: Apple *does* ->do some annoying things--but the Mac is a wonderful machine, and I ->have no intention of boycotting it. -> [stuff about how good Macs are deleted] One of the objections is that Mr Warren is using Usenet as a primary tool to conduct research. This means that he is using the loose affiliation of organizations and their resources (including those of Apple's competitors). Just as you should not use Usenet to advertize your product, I think it goes thouroughly against the whole idea of Usenet to use it to conduct a market survey. This is not only a moral standpoint, but it also protects Usenet from getting involved in litigation. Apple can spend its own money on gathering information that it can use to build a better product. If Apple were useing Usenet to help publish an open standard things might be different, but I don't think that anybody really expects this of them. Steve Austin
Path: gmdzi!unido!unidui!math.fu-berlin.de!fauern!ira.uka.de! sol.ctr.columbia.edu!samsung!uunet!van-bc!rsoft!mindlink!a218 From: Charlie_Gi...@mindlink.bc.ca (Charlie Gibbs) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <7513@mindlink.bc.ca> Date: 19 Sep 91 01:16:42 GMT Organization: MIND LINK! - British Columbia, Canada Lines: 30 In article <66...@bbn.BBN.COM> saus...@bbn.com (Steve Austin) writes: >... I think it goes thouroughly against the whole idea of Usenet >to use it to conduct a market survey. This is not only a moral >standpoint, but it also protects Usenet from getting involved in >litigation. > >Apple can spend its own money on gathering information that it >can use to build a better product. If Apple were useing Usenet to >help publish an open standard things might be different, but I don't think >that anybody really expects this of them. I enjoy helping people out if I can answer their questions. But consider the following scenario: I say a few things that get incorporated into this survey. A while later someone asks me similar questions to which I give similar answers. Based on this advice, he writes something that's similar enough to something that Apple did that they set the dogs on him. Not only that, I get charged with counseling the poor guy to commit the act that he's being charged for. Silly? Perhaps. Paranoid? I hope so. But given the current state of affairs, where people would rather litigate than innovate, it's certainly not impossible. Under the circumstances, maybe we'd better watch our exposure. Just Say No. :-) Charlie_Gi...@mindlink.bc.ca "I'm cursed with hair from HELL!" -- Night Court
Path: gmdzi!unido!mcsun!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!casbah.acns.nwu.edu! nucsrl!ddsw1!whos From: w...@ddsw1.MCS.COM (Ben Feen) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <1991Sep18.232131.8758@ddsw1.MCS.COM> Date: 18 Sep 91 23:21:31 GMT References: <16288@goofy.Apple.COM> <3822@uqcspe.cs.uq.oz.au> <LARRY.91Sep17163935@peak.psl.nmsu> Organization: ddsw1.MCS.COM Contributor, Chicago, IL Lines: 20 In article <LARRY.91Sep17163...@peak.psl.nmsu> la...@peak.psl.nmsu (Larry Cunningham) writes: >Gee, isn't Apple that company who tries to sue everyone for copying >=their= graphics interface, which they stole from Xerox in the first place? Now, now... The recent computer issue of Sci. American had a big article on Xerox PARC, and it looks like they're doing new and exciting things with GUI's, while Apple is still making new flavors of Macs. >Let's =don't= help Apple do anything, huh? On the other hand, Apple is more or less responsible for computer technology as we know it today. To be more specific, Steve Wozniak is responsible for computer technology as we know it today, and Steve Jobs is responsible for shitty machines as we know them today. -- w...@ddsw1.MCS.COM | I don't know, who's at DDSW1? | w...@ddsw1.MCS.COM! I asked YOU who's at DDSW1! Ok, there's a guy at DDSW1, right? | Right! Who? | Exactly! | What? | No, he's at lll-winken. | Where? | No, What! | I don't know! | He's at gargoyle. | Who? | No, he's at DDSW1.MCS.COM!
Path: gmdzi!unido!math.fu-berlin.de!ira.uka.de!yale.edu!qt.cs.utexas.edu! zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!caen!uvaarpa!murdoch!topaz!spm2d From: sp...@topaz.cs.Virginia.EDU (Steven P. Miale) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <1991Sep19.115610.29869@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> Date: 19 Sep 91 11:56:10 GMT References: <3822@uqcspe.cs.uq.oz.au> <LARRY.91Sep17163935@peak.psl.nmsu> <1991Sep18.232131.8758@ddsw1.MCS.COM> Sender: use...@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU Organization: University of Virginia Computer Science Department Lines: 38 In article <1991Sep18.232131.8...@ddsw1.MCS.COM> w...@ddsw1.MCS.COM (Ben Feen) writes: >In article <LARRY.91Sep17163...@peak.psl.nmsu> la...@peak.psl.nmsu (Larry Cunningham) writes: >>Gee, isn't Apple that company who tries to sue everyone for copying >>=their= graphics interface, which they stole from Xerox in the first place? > >Now, now... The recent computer issue of Sci. American had a big article on >Xerox PARC, and it looks like they're doing new and exciting things with >GUI's, while Apple is still making new flavors of Macs. EVERYBODY is doing something new with GUIs. Including UVa. > >>Let's =don't= help Apple do anything, huh? > >On the other hand, Apple is more or less responsible for computer technology >as we know it today. To be more specific, Steve Wozniak is responsible for >computer technology as we know it today, and Steve Jobs is responsible for >shitty machines as we know them today. And NONE OF THEM are at Apple anymore! Jobs founded NeXT (help them instead) and Wozniak is working with the EFF. The people who run Apple now are lawyers and profiteers. *NOT* Computer Scientists. Even IBM allowed people to make clones of its computers! Can you say the same for Apple? Remember, all that Apple *WILL* do with this info is make a GUI and sue everybody who tries to make the same improvements. Screw that. > >-- >w...@ddsw1.MCS.COM | I don't know, who's at DDSW1? | w...@ddsw1.MCS.COM! >I asked YOU who's at DDSW1! Ok, there's a guy at DDSW1, right? | Right! >Who? | Exactly! | What? | No, he's at lll-winken. | Where? | No, What! | I >don't know! | He's at gargoyle. | Who? | No, he's at DDSW1.MCS.COM! Steven Miale | "No delirium, no absurd metaphors, no | University of Virginia | feelings: nothing but facts. Because I | Undergraduate Researcher | am well, I am entirely, absolutely well."| sp...@uvacs.cs.virginia.edu | - Yevgeny Zamyatin, _WE_ |
Path: gmdzi!unido!mcsun!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!think.com!barmar From: bar...@think.com (Barry Margolin) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <1991Sep19.155336.16068@Think.COM> Date: 19 Sep 91 15:53:36 GMT References: <7513@mindlink.bc.ca> Sender: n...@Think.COM Reply-To: bar...@think.com Organization: Thinking Machines Corporation, Cambridge MA, USA Lines: 33 In article <7...@mindlink.bc.ca> Charlie_Gi...@mindlink.bc.ca (Charlie Gibbs) writes: >But consider the following scenario: I say a few things that get >incorporated into this survey. A while later someone asks me >similar questions to which I give similar answers. Based on this >advice, he writes something that's similar enough to something that >Apple did that they set the dogs on him. Not only that, I get >charged with counseling the poor guy to commit the act that he's >being charged for. Sounds like you're confusing copyrights with patents. If you invent something independently, you can't have violated a copyright. You have to actively copy something (hence the "copy" in the term); e.g., look at a Macintosh, say to yourself, "that trash can in the bottom right is a nice feature," and then put a trash can icon in the bottom right of your own display. If this guy comes out with his software around the same time as Apple, and he wasn't a beta tester, it's unlikely that he could have copied it. It's only patents that disallow independent invention as an excuse for infringement. Also, they probably wouldn't bother suing if there were just one or two similar features (there's only so many ways to open a menu, for instance); the guy isn't likely to come out with an entire UIMS that duplicates most of Apple's just because he got a few ideas from the same people who answered Apple's survey. Apple went after people who had applications that looked almost exactly like the Finder, not just because they had a trash can in the bottom right. -- Barry Margolin, Thinking Machines Corp. bar...@think.com {uunet,harvard}!think!barmar
Path: gmdzi!unido!math.fu-berlin.de!fauern!ira.uka.de!yale.edu! qt.cs.utexas.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu! linac!midway!quads!jcav From: j...@quads.uchicago.edu (john cavallino) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <1991Sep19.174209.1287@midway.uchicago.edu> Date: 19 Sep 91 17:42:09 GMT References: <LARRY.91Sep17163935@peak.psl.nmsu> <1991Sep18.232131.8758@ddsw1.MCS.COM> <1991Sep19.115610.29869@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> Sender: n...@midway.uchicago.edu (NewsMistress) Organization: University of Chicago Lines: 17 In article <1991Sep19.115610.29...@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> sp...@topaz.cs.Virginia.EDU (Steven P. Miale) writes: >Even IBM allowed people to make clones of its computers! Don't credit IBM with any such generosity. IBM sued the first clean-room clone makers and _lost_. They would very much preferred to have stopped them. The reason no Macintosh clones have appeared is that cloning the Mac OS under lawsuit-proof clean-room conditions is much much more difficult than cloning the silly ROM BIOS of PC-type computers, and because not enough of a potential market was perceived. Now, a company called NuTech is supposedly nearing the release of clone ROMs produced via strict clean-room techniques. We shall see... -- John Cavallino | EMail: j...@midway.uchicago.edu University of Chicago Hospitals | USMail: 5841 S. Maryland Ave, Box 145 Office of Facilities Management | Chicago, IL 60637 B0 f++ c+ g+ k s+(+) e+ h- pv (qv) | Telephone: 312-702-6900
Path: gmdzi!unido!mcsun!uunet!sugar!taronga!peter From: pe...@taronga.hackercorp.com (Peter da Silva) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <WS98V6B@taronga.hackercorp.com> Date: 24 Sep 91 03:06:33 GMT References: <1991Sep19.155336.16068@Think.COM> Organization: Taronga Park BBS Lines: 16 bar...@think.com (Barry Margolin) writes: > Apple went after people who had applications that > looked almost exactly like the Finder, not just because they had a trash > can in the bottom right. Apple went after their major competitors, because they thought they had a leg to stand on. They deliberately modified the interface their competitors were using way out of delivered specs to produce something that looked a little like a Mac. If you think there's any justice in their stand, or that the scenario you're responding to isn't possible, you're fooling yourself. -- -- Peter da Silva. 3D0G `-_-' -- Taronga Park BBS. -- +1 713 568 0480|1032 2400/n/8/1. -- "Have you hugged your wolf today?"
Path: gmdzi!unido!mcsun!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu! connection!jerry From: je...@connection.prospect.com (Jerry Shekhel) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <1991Sep24.210141.20139@ctr.columbia.edu> Date: 24 Sep 91 21:01:41 GMT References: <LARRY.91Sep17163935@peak.psl.nmsu> <1991Sep18.232131.8758@ddsw1.MCS.COM> <1991Sep19.115610.29869@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> <1991Sep19.174209.1287@midway.uchicago.edu> Sender: use...@ctr.columbia.edu (I Use Net) Organization: Polygen Corporation, Waltham, MA Lines: 27 j...@quads.uchicago.edu (john cavallino) writes: > >The reason no Macintosh clones have appeared is that cloning the Mac >OS under lawsuit-proof clean-room conditions is much much more difficult than >cloning the silly ROM BIOS of PC-type computers, and because not enough of >a potential market was perceived. Now, a company called NuTech is supposedly >nearing the release of clone ROMs produced via strict clean-room techniques. >We shall see... > OK, now I'm REALLY confused. It's OK for a small company to make a CLONE Mac as long as they don't actually use any of Apple's code, but it's a NO-NO for a big company in Redmond to make an environment that even REMOTELY RESEMBLES the Mac? Where's the distinction here? > >John Cavallino > -- +-------------------+----------------------+---------------------------------+ | JERRY J. SHEKHEL | POLYGEN CORPORATION | When I was young, I had to walk | | Drummers do it... | Waltham, MA USA | to school and back every day -- | | ... In rhythm! | (617) 890-2175 | 20 miles, uphill both ways. | +-------------------+----------------------+---------------------------------+ | ...! [ princeton mit-eddie bu sunne ] !polygen!jerry | | je...@polygen.com | +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
Path: gmdzi!unido!mcsun!ukc!edcastle!dcs.ed.ac.uk!awrc From: a...@dcs.ed.ac.uk (Al Crawford) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: Human Interface Survey Message-ID: <18288@skye.dcs.ed.ac.uk> Date: 25 Sep 91 10:30:02 GMT References: <LARRY.91Sep17163935@peak.psl.nmsu> <1991Sep18.232131.8758@ddsw1.MCS.COM> <1991Sep19.115610.29869@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> <1991Sep19.174209.1287@midway.uchicago.edu> <1991Sep24.210141.20139@ctr.columbia.edu> Sender: nn...@dcs.ed.ac.uk Reply-To: a...@dcs.ed.ac.uk (Al Crawford) Organization: The University Of Edinburgh - Department Of Computer Science Lines: 18 In article <1991Sep24.210141.20...@ctr.columbia.edu> je...@connection.prospect.com (Jerry Shekhel) writes: > >OK, now I'm REALLY confused. It's OK for a small company to make a CLONE >Mac as long as they don't actually use any of Apple's code, but it's a >NO-NO for a big company in Redmond to make an environment that even REMOTELY >RESEMBLES the Mac? Where's the distinction here? The Mac clones won't be using the Mac GUI, which is the bit Apple get lawsuit-happy about, the cloning will be of the OS itself. I believe the GUI on the NuTech clone will be based around Motif or something along those lines. The idea is that when you run Mac applications on your Mac clone it'll still run OK but it'll have NuTech looks rather than the standard Mac desktop. Quite how this'll work, I'm not sure, but it'll be interesting to see how their attempt turns out. -- Al Crawford - a...@dcs.ed.ac.uk "Such a digital lifetime, it's been by numbers all the while"
Path: gmdzi!unido!unidui!math.fu-berlin.de!fauern!ira.uka.de!yale.edu! qt.cs.utexas.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!think.com!barmar From: bar...@think.com (Barry Margolin) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: MacClone (was Re: Human Interface Survey) Message-ID: <1991Sep25.195308.23483@Think.COM> Date: 25 Sep 91 19:53:08 GMT References: <1991Sep19.174209.1287@midway.uchicago.edu> <1991Sep24.210141.20139@ctr.columbia.edu> <18288@skye.dcs.ed.ac.uk> Sender: n...@Think.COM Reply-To: bar...@think.com Organization: Thinking Machines Corporation, Cambridge MA, USA Lines: 33 In article <18...@skye.dcs.ed.ac.uk> a...@dcs.ed.ac.uk (Al Crawford) writes: >The idea is that when you run Mac applications on your Mac clone >it'll still run OK but it'll have NuTech looks rather than the standard Mac >desktop. Quite how this'll work, I'm not sure, but it'll be interesting to >see how their attempt turns out. Yes, it should be pretty interesting. I actually don't think it should be *that* hard to get it working, even. The Macintosh Toolbox is extremely well modularized, so it should be relatively easy to plug in different GUI styles without affecting applications. For instance, when applications put up windows, they specify generic window types in the calls to the Window Manager, and then the Window Manager constructs the actual window. The application never actually specifies details such as the location of the close box, resize handles, or window labels. Clicks in these boxes are translated into higher-level events by the Window Manager. Similarly, applications display menus with generic calls, and it's up to the Menu Manager to actually place them and generate appropriate events. To some extent, MacOS was designed with this type of replaceability in mind. This is one of the things that impressed me about the Mac; not only was it nice looking on the outside, it's reasonably well designed on the inside. It's not perfect, as it can be extremely tedious to program (every program has to start with a zillion InitXXX calls, for example); application skeletons and libraries like MacApp fill in many of the holes, though. -- Barry Margolin, Thinking Machines Corp. bar...@think.com {uunet,harvard}!think!barmar