How Apple Ruined GEM - And Nearly Windows, Too!

Ғылым және технология

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Digital Research's Graphics Environment Manager - or GEM - was released for PCs and the Atari ST in 1985. Unfortunately it was a liitle bit too close in look-and-feel to Apple's recently released OS on the Macintosh (and earlier the Lisa), leading to legal pressure to remove certain features. This is the story of how GEM 1 ultimately ended up being by far the most feature-packed release as a result, and how this may well have lead to Apple and Microsoft becoming the dominant desktop platforms throughout the 90s and beyond.
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  • @sunspot42
    @sunspot42 Жыл бұрын

    Apple avoided suing Atari in part because Atari had a *lot* of patents of their own, and you did not want to get into a patent war with Jack Tramiel. If the ST had been more-successful Apple probably would have had a go at them. And they probably would have regretted it.

  • @ctrlaltrees

    @ctrlaltrees

    Жыл бұрын

    Very good point. Tramiel was ruthless and I'm sure would have taken on Apple without a second thought!

  • @serqetry

    @serqetry

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeah it doesn't sound very plausible that Apple chose not to sue Atari only because the ST's success was below a certain threshold. The ST actually started out really strong, and I remember Apple did take action against the company that made the Magic Sac cartridge that let you run MacOS ROMs on the ST... certainly that was worth their time even less if the ST's sales weren't enough to concern them. There was probably just too much to lose taking on Atari directly.

  • @bobweiram6321

    @bobweiram6321

    6 ай бұрын

    @@ctrlaltreesIn the end, the company with the deepest pockets usually wins.

  • @bobweiram6321

    @bobweiram6321

    6 ай бұрын

    Apple most likely didn't sue Atari because they licensed GEM from Digital Research. No business worth their salt would sign a licensing deal without liability protection from the licensor. Apple would have to sue Digital Research again, but the case had already been settled. As for the Amiga, the UI wasn't close enough copy of the Macintosh. Xerox had the patent on the GUI, but Apple added their own special touches they like the trash can they patented. Microsoft's waste basket was a clear knock off of the Mac as well as a few other features.

  • @MistaMaddog247
    @MistaMaddog247 Жыл бұрын

    Sorry but Jobs was already out of Apple in 1985 when John Scully took over and started suing DRI and Microsoft for having any type of GUI. Scully not only drove Jobs out of Apple but started selling Macs for corporate markets instead of "rest of us"...hence the lawsuits.

  • @antoller3541

    @antoller3541

    Жыл бұрын

    When they think of Apple they think of Jobs. Yup the eighties were about the corporate market. Ataris and Coomodores were for kids. Vision GEM with Ventura publisher was pretty good but died of boredom. Vision died beacuse Lotus 123 popped up. The judge threw out the Xerox lawsuit against Apple because Xeox could not produce a shrink-wrapped copy of STAR (later Documenter).

  • @antoller3541

    @antoller3541

    Жыл бұрын

    Damn i hate spellcheckers.

  • @sluxi

    @sluxi

    3 ай бұрын

    Jobs being gone at that point was already said in the video. That wasn't the beginning of this legal bullying according to it though.

  • @oscodains
    @oscodains Жыл бұрын

    Gary Kildall & his team is really the reason behind computers as they exist today, much more worthy of attention than Jobs imo. The ethical standards Gary held were far above anyone else. Even funding Computer Chronicles when Jobs said along the lines of “why would I pay to show my competitors alongside my products?”

  • @kasimirdenhertog3516

    @kasimirdenhertog3516

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree, he also came up with the BIOS, something still very significant for computers.

  • @lawrencedoliveiro9104

    @lawrencedoliveiro9104

    Жыл бұрын

    Note that the CP/M idea of a “BIOS” was the part that held the device drivers. The ROM “BIOS” in the IBM PC was something quite different.

  • @tithund

    @tithund

    11 ай бұрын

    Well it enables the connection between the os and the hard disk interface, as well as all the other integrated components, so it seems like it's still kind of a low level driver, with a settings menu.

  • @lawrencedoliveiro9104

    @lawrencedoliveiro9104

    11 ай бұрын

    The “ROM BIOS” is not used as a device-driver layer by any OS more recent than OS/2.

  • @DarkSideofSynth

    @DarkSideofSynth

    6 ай бұрын

    Good people and big business hardly ever get along. The psychopaths are revered and remembered as they reach the top, while the 'nice guys' who really did the hard work, and revolutionised the world are overshadowed and forgotten.

  • @GoatTheGoat
    @GoatTheGoat Жыл бұрын

    It is hard to believe Gary Kildall let Apple steal his GUI lunch without a fight after Microsoft stole his OS lunch a decade earlier.

  • @ctrlaltrees

    @ctrlaltrees

    Жыл бұрын

    Poor old Gary. He's worthy of a whole documentary in and of himself. Really interesting guy.

  • @bazza5699

    @bazza5699

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ctrlaltrees yeah, he did it all and got totally shafted.. poor guy..

  • @GoatTheGoat

    @GoatTheGoat

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ctrlaltrees Yes. The histories of Digital Research and Gary Kildall are a gold mine of great stories from the PC golden age. Usually people just tell the story how he lost the IBM PC OS deal because he was out flying his airplane and leave it at that. But there is a lot more interesting stories from Kildall's life. Right up to how he died after being attacked for wearing the wrong color in a biker bar.

  • @JayRCela

    @JayRCela

    Жыл бұрын

    my understanding is that Gary was an extremely laid back kinda guy, and just lost track of priorities.

  • @techdistractions

    @techdistractions

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ctrlaltrees computer chronicles did a special on him that is worth a view 👍

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife Жыл бұрын

    The first GUI on a personal computer was actually from neither Apple nor Microsoft; it was VisiOn, by VisiCorp (makers of VisiCalc), for the IBM PC. Bill Gates saw a demo of it at COMDEX in 1982 and as soon as he got back to Redmond he demanded that Microsoft start working on what became Windows. Unfortunately, VisiOn was unsuccessful, because it required 512K of RAM, a hard drive, and a mouse, something very few PC users had at the time.

  • @daishi5571

    @daishi5571

    9 ай бұрын

    If a tree falls if the forest but nobody is around to hear, does it make a sound... lol

  • @user-rt9zq8rs9k

    @user-rt9zq8rs9k

    6 ай бұрын

    WRONG . Both Steve Jobs and Bill Gates witnessed a XEROX project that Steve Jobs stole from . His Mac is a ripoff of XEROX from the late 70s . Google it .

  • @CommonSense-hy2sn
    @CommonSense-hy2sn Жыл бұрын

    4:20 According to Apple CEO Jean-Louis Gassée, Apple was actually really scared of the Amiga and the Workbench team rejected GEOS as a GUI as it was considered too Mac-like and made sure to their own GUI was a clean room implementation without looking at was already on the market. I have a hunch that your source was probably trying to save face as compared to GEM, Apple would have a much more difficult case against Workbench and Commodore. It really sucks how GEM was sabotaged, Visicorp already had their IBM PC GUI, Visi On, out in 1983 which it's self was sabotaged by Microsoft by sort of vapor/paperlaunching Windows the same year.. Really innovative duopoly

  • @jandoor2068

    @jandoor2068

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly. The "Commodore was not worth the effort of suing" theory simply does not hold water as Commodore were still the market leader in the mid 80's with the C64 outselling EVERY Apple model combined.

  • @desiv1170

    @desiv1170

    4 ай бұрын

    Also, apparently Amiga was pretty by the book on their OS dev. From the book, Commodore - The Amiga Years ---- The Amiga employees were careful not to put themselves at risk of a lawsuit over the GUI. "We started out passing around design docs. The actual implementation was done completely behind the walls so that there was no knowledge of what anyone else had done," says [RJ] Mical. Because of this policy, Amiga did not not receive any infringement lawsuits based on their GUI. "Not a one; not from anyone, ever," says Mical. "I attribute that mostly to the fact that once I decided that I needed to do a user interface, I slammed the door and drew the blinds and invented it completely and entirely on my own. I didn't look at any other computer system through the whole period. We wanted it to be as clean-room as possible." ---

  • @Xoferif
    @Xoferif Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, one of my buddies got an Amstrad PC after I'd had my STE for a couple of years. I well remember being truly flabbergasted at how utterly pants the PC version of GEM was!

  • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
    @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Жыл бұрын

    I will admit it, I was one of those Mac fanatics at the time who ridiculed lookalikes like GEM. One of the changes they had to make to appease Apple’s lawyers was have the menus appear just by mousing over their titles, without having to click. I would refer to these as “fall-down” menus!

  • @ThisIsPete
    @ThisIsPete Жыл бұрын

    Apple snubbing Atari in the GEM lawsuit battles must have been doubly galling given how many people referred to the ST as the "Jackintosh". But as a commenter said below, chances are it was more likely Apple just didn't want to get into a war with the notoriously ruthless Tramiel. As much as Apple hasn't shied away from many fights over the years, I suspect battling Tramiel would have been orders of magnitude more of a pain in the arse for everyone involved!

  • @przemekkobel4874

    @przemekkobel4874

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, the guy survived both Auschwitz and (literally) a meeting with dr Mengele. Imagine fighting someone with such track record.

  • @FindecanorNotGmail
    @FindecanorNotGmail Жыл бұрын

    Well, Bill Atkinson at Apple _did_ invent the pull-down menu bar, double-click, selection lasso and -overlapping- *clipping* windows. -Overlapping- window *clipping* came about because Atkinson mistakenly _thought_ that Xerox' system already had it ... Icons on the desktop was _not_ an Apple invention though: Xerox _did_ have _that_ . (Edited.)

  • @CommonSense-hy2sn

    @CommonSense-hy2sn

    Жыл бұрын

    Didn't Atkinson copied overlapping windows from a Xerox GUI concept demo? I wonder if Visi On already had overlapping windows at comdex 1982, the final product in 1983 has it.

  • @DevilishDesign

    @DevilishDesign

    Жыл бұрын

    @@CommonSense-hy2sn The Xerox system could do overlapping windows but the key thing was, it had to redraw the entire display if a window / menu moved. Atkinson implemented clipping, where the display only redrew the sections that were now visible after a window move / close. Apple also done this in software whereas Xerox had done most of this kind of stuff in hardware. I think it's unfair to say Apple copied Xerox. More like they were influenced by what they saw at Xerox.

  • @lawrencedoliveiro9104

    @lawrencedoliveiro9104

    Жыл бұрын

    Specifically, Bill Atkinson invented (and patented) an efficient scheme to represent nonrectangular regions of pixels, that could have holes in them or even consist of multiple discontiguous parts. The QuickDraw graphics in the Mac (and I presume the Lisa before it) made heavy use of these “regions” for clipping and also as drawing (filling/stroking) objects in their own right. Since the patent was filed in 1982, I think it had expired by 2002.

  • @paul_boddie

    @paul_boddie

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DevilishDesign A lot of this got litigated - literally - in the Apple vs. Microsoft case, as I understand it. Certainly, I have come across correspondence between lawyers and other parties with regard to prior art, specifically related to the PERQ window system and indicating that Three Rivers demonstrated an overlapping window manager in 1979 and 1980 at SIGGRAPH. I also vaguely recall a story, perhaps told by one of the Bell Labs people (since they were also doing graphical user interfaces), about some kind of animation in a window that could be partially concealed and revealed by other windows and yet updated in an optimised fashion. It isn't unusual, then, that a system would issue a bunch of redraw events to applications in order to implement that kind of update regime. I remember it well from Acorn's RISC OS, and I'm pretty sure things like Xlib do the same. As always in technology, a lot of people tend to find themselves doing a lot of the same things at around the same time, but there is always someone who wants to have ownership of it all. The Apple lawsuit had a chilling effect on the industry, and then after they lost, we had to spend the 1990s arguing with people going on about Fitts' Law. A decade that Apple might not have completed had Microsoft not needed some kind of competitive figleaf and bailed Apple out.

  • @ctrlaltrees

    @ctrlaltrees

    Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting, thanks for the info. There was certainly a lot of cross-pollination going on at the time and it's a very complex story. Hopefully this overview inspires people to go out and do some further reading into the details. 🙂

  • @daishi5571
    @daishi5571 Жыл бұрын

    Steve Jobs "How dare they make a GUI. I stole that fair and square" there are so many instances of SJ being a POS.

  • @IrishCarney

    @IrishCarney

    9 ай бұрын

    But he didn't steal it. He paid Xerox for it. The Palo Alto engineers were furious but the Xerox corporate brass were clueless

  • @daishi5571

    @daishi5571

    9 ай бұрын

    @@IrishCarney This is the twisted BS that allowed SJ to look better than he was. SJ/Apple did not pay Xerox for it, there was no license agreement. What came about was that Xerox allowed SJ to take a look around and that Xerox would buy at a discount shares in Apple (so any money trail was actually from Xerox to Apple, but you are right about Xerox being clueless). This is a typical thing that happens between companies, and I have done it myself. It shows off expertise, with the idea that could turn around into licensing. SJ saw the GUI and thought how could he get that on to the Lisa. He himself had no idea, he was clueless in that area so he had other take a close look at it for implementation. What I found is funny is SJ's outrage that someone would do to him that he had no problem doing to others. To quote him quoting Picasso "'Good artists copy; great artists steal" Apple can't even claim a cleanroom reimplementation of the GUI, but I will say they definitely improved upon it.

  • @kirishima638

    @kirishima638

    7 ай бұрын

    @@daishi5571except there was an agreement, on paper between Xerox and Apple, which is why Xerox never sued Apple later. That it was a bad deal for Xerox is irrelevant. Also, Apple didn’t use a single line of code from Xerox and the Lisa and later MacOS was a massive improvement over the Star and that was 100% down to Apple developing the concept. Then Microsoft came along, straight up lifted it from Apple, and called it Windows. No agreements, no deals, no stock. Just straight up theft.

  • @bobweiram6321

    @bobweiram6321

    6 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@daishi5571Do you understand how finance and stocks work? They purchased a chunk of Apple well below market rate with a low tax burden. Imagine if I someone sold you a car worth $50K for $5K and you only paid taxes on the $5K. A few years later, Apple's stock shot through the roof, making Xerox a fortune. It's part of the reason Xerox didn't go belly up. Now imagine if the $50K car became a highly desirable collectible worth $500K. Xerox got a killer deal, a wet dream of every business person.

  • @slaapliedje

    @slaapliedje

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@daishi5571I still maintain that macs would be far better these days if they had not bought NeXT and used BeOS instead. Modern macOS is just so chonky and slow, even on otherwise good hardware.

  • @DanielHuman1996
    @DanielHuman19969 ай бұрын

    Both GUIs were based on the Xerox Star, which was developed in Palo Alto. However, Xerox lost its patents after US government ruled it a monopoly.

  • @paul_boddie

    @paul_boddie

    7 ай бұрын

    Are you not thinking of AT&T rather than Xerox? Rees covers the Xerox case against Apple in the video.

  • @cathrynm
    @cathrynm2 ай бұрын

    I don't know if Atari ST ever got real printer drivers working for GEM. I had a friend who bought a printer and was told by salesmen ' a driver would come soon', and that never happened.

  • @AdamKlobukowski
    @AdamKlobukowski Жыл бұрын

    XaAes is not a continuation, but clean room reimplementation. There is also MyAes, and N.Aes (also clean room reimplementations)

  • @ctrlaltrees

    @ctrlaltrees

    Жыл бұрын

    Interesting, thanks for the info! I must admit I'd never come across it until researching this video. I suppose it still has its roots in GEM, if only as an inspiration.

  • @domramsey
    @domramsey Жыл бұрын

    I used to love playing with GEM Paint on the Amstrad PC1640 my mum had at work. Hadn't seen anything like it before and it was just so cool to me, despite being quite limited.

  • @rikp
    @rikp27 күн бұрын

    I used Ventura Publisher on GEM ca. 1990 and the one killer feature of GEM, I thought, was the large scroll bar size which made them easier to grab than any scroll bars on Mac or Win I've used since. I still miss those.

  • @winstonsmith478
    @winstonsmith478 Жыл бұрын

    BTW, the excellent GFA BASIC on the ST is now available free for Windows as GFA-BASIC 32 for Windows.

  • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
    @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Жыл бұрын

    0:25 Rumour has it that TOS always had to be sold, never given away, because “you couldn’t give a TOS”.

  • @ctrlaltrees

    @ctrlaltrees

    Жыл бұрын

    Ha!

  • @jandoor2068

    @jandoor2068

    Жыл бұрын

    Hmmm, I heard a different story. Apparently TOS users are tossers. ;)

  • @Motocicleiros
    @Motocicleiros8 ай бұрын

    It brings so many memories... I used Ventura Publisher with GEM myself back at the end of the 80s decade and ended up giving up of it in favor of Page Maker with a bizarre version of Windows called "runtime". I really don't expect that you young fellas have a glimpse of what I am talking about, though!

  • @Eric-lr5ur
    @Eric-lr5ur Жыл бұрын

    I really appreciate your wokk, bud. Always interesting and accurate. Thanks!

  • @ctrlaltrees

    @ctrlaltrees

    Жыл бұрын

    That's very kind of you to say. Thanks for watching!

  • @jandoor2068
    @jandoor2068 Жыл бұрын

    Lol, seems pretty stupid that Apple didn't consider Commodore a viable target for suing when even as late as the mid 80s Commodore STILL held the majority share of the personal computer market with the C64 outselling all Apple models COMBINED.... me thinks there might be a bit more to the story than that.... ;)

  • @RogerioPereiradaSilva77

    @RogerioPereiradaSilva77

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, to be fair, Apple probably had already realized that Commodore executives couldn't find their way out of a brown paper bag and correctly assumed that they would hang themselves at some point further down the road without help from anyone, which they did. It boggles the mind that Commodore just didn't realize what they had in their hands and that we're all using Windows and Mac PCs today instead of Amigas.

  • @joojoojeejee6058

    @joojoojeejee6058

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RogerioPereiradaSilva77 Amiga was a closed platform, and it would have never reached the momentum of the PC. Besides, by the mid to late 1980s it was already too late, as PCs dominated the business markets. Macs became a quite popular niche basically out of sheer luck (and good marketing, I guess). The company almost went bankrupt in the mid 1990s.

  • @RogerioPereiradaSilva77

    @RogerioPereiradaSilva77

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joojoojeejee6058 While I don't disagree with the overall gist of your post, you must recall that the IBM PC only became an "open standard" almost by accident because Compaq and a few others bandied together to reverse engineer the BIOS in order to produce their clones; IBM itself never intended the PC to become "open" and in fact tried, unsuccessfully, to regain the reins later with the PS/2 and MCA. At the time that these things occurred, all platforms were somewhat proprietary - Sun's was the closest to today's definition of an open platform - and thus whichever direction the market would go would be a coin toss, to be honest. The Amiga was uniquely positioned to take the lead given that not only it was literally years ahead of its competitors in terms of multitasking and multimedia capabilities but also because it did it for a fraction of the price, custom chips and all. Even Commodore being hopelessly clueless as it was, noticed this and was starting to go after the business market with things like the A4000 and their ill-fated Amiga port of UNIX SVR4. At some point they would realize that open up the platform would be the way to ensure its survival. But again, as we all know very well Commodore was too stupid to pull this off and the rest is history...

  • @gibant1
    @gibant1 Жыл бұрын

    I first used GEM in 1984 on an Apricot F1 which had a trackball.

  • @pigknickers2975

    @pigknickers2975

    10 ай бұрын

    Forogt about the Apricot, thank you

  • @RetrogradeScene
    @RetrogradeScene Жыл бұрын

    This is a very much a topic high on my interests. Nicely done as always

  • @DTM-Books
    @DTM-Books2 ай бұрын

    As always, the best movie about the 1980s computer industry is "Pirates of Silicon Valley," which tells the story of Apple and Microsoft so perfectly. It's like The Godfather for computer nerds.

  • @ActionRetro
    @ActionRetro Жыл бұрын

    Wow awesome video! I didn't know half of this drama!

  • @Psy500
    @Psy500 Жыл бұрын

    I would think Apple didn't go after Atari and Commodore in that it would give both huge media coverage in the USA. Atari's and Commodore's 16 bit machines outsold the Mac in Europe in the 80s by a significant amount thus had sizable war chests to take Apple to court while also having products that already crushed the Mac in Europe. IBM clones didn't start to take over the home market anywhere till the very end of the 80s when over supply of clone PCs drove prices way down at the low end.

  • @8bvg300
    @8bvg300Ай бұрын

    We had a Amstrad pc 1512, originally running DR DOS and we had GEM. Used to use the paint program and also has a program for making birthday banners/birthday cards... That sort of thing. Then we'd print things out on our Oki Microline. Happy days 😅

  • @SproutyPottedPlant
    @SproutyPottedPlant Жыл бұрын

    I remember thinking how rubbish GEM was on the Amstrad compared to the ST 💪 if only Apple didn’t bother inventing the Mac, what would the world of computing be like? Maybe Atari ST would still exist 😀 and it would have GarageBand and Logic Pro on it !

  • @PaulSpades

    @PaulSpades

    9 ай бұрын

    "Invent", the Mac? The original mackintosh was nothing new, and never was particularly innovative, though there was always something shiny to sell every generation. And the Atary ST and Amigas were used for music, mostly as sequencers and trackers. Some of that ST software was Creator and Notator - that became Notator Logic. Notator Logic was later ported to win and mac os. Logic Pro comes from ST software. The first Cubase version was also initially released on the ST.

  • @a1white
    @a1white9 ай бұрын

    I think GEM probably made problems for themselves by looking so much like the Apple operating system. The GUI looked virtually identical to Apples.

  • @balesjo
    @balesjo10 ай бұрын

    I'd forgotten about GEM. There were several graphical programs for DOS and several alternatives early on for early versions of Windows.

  • @dr_jaymz
    @dr_jaymz9 ай бұрын

    is there a gem desktop we can run in a browser like the many mac / windows / risc os old machines?

  • @10p6
    @10p6 Жыл бұрын

    I loved Gem on the STE/FALCON over the Amigas offering, but the ST version of GEM was slow compared to Apple who wrote direct to hardware with its GUI.

  • @zarjesve2

    @zarjesve2

    10 ай бұрын

    Well we did not wait to long for screen accelerators on ST though... With this accelerators, ST was quite faster than Mac.

  • @Trusteft
    @Trusteft Жыл бұрын

    Ouch indeed. I like how the see you next time bit looked like a threat. :) Great video man, thanks for sharing. :)

  • @markae0
    @markae0 Жыл бұрын

    I had GEM running on my ATARI PC with no hard drive.

  • @DJRonnieG

    @DJRonnieG

    10 ай бұрын

    That was cool when I found out it was running in ROM.... I think there were six ROM chips on the system board for that.

  • @RetroTinkerer
    @RetroTinkerer Жыл бұрын

    I know I have my bias against Jobs... But damnit as years keep going it's not getting better.

  • @hintoninstruments2369
    @hintoninstruments23692 ай бұрын

    Too much distraction by "look and feel". GEM had sophisticated features that the PC and Mac still lack, e.g. text templates in dialog boxes. It was simpler to code applications too, you didn't need a team like a Hollywood movie for a desk accessory.

  • @ms-ex8em
    @ms-ex8em10 ай бұрын

    do u know about the Dragon 32 or 64 ?? what about grand prix type in game for the Dragon 32 ?? ive been looking for it for 40 years yes 40 years !!!!!!

  • @bazza5699
    @bazza5699 Жыл бұрын

    Gem sits on top of TOS.. so is TOS text driven, like DOS? can it be accessed independently

  • @ctrlaltrees

    @ctrlaltrees

    Жыл бұрын

    Not that I'm aware of. Atari very nearly went with DR's CP/M 86k as the underlying OS before changing it at the last minute. It's interesting that TOS never had a text shell / command prompt like other systems at the time, but I suppose Tramiel saw the Mac as his main competition and that didn't have it either.

  • @marioromijn1306

    @marioromijn1306

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes and no, programs can run in a TOS environment that gives a console with a blinky cursor and a library of system calls to manage memory and file handling, but it is up to the individual programs to handle user input. There is not a command line operating system to manage files and start programs from.

  • @sunspot42

    @sunspot42

    10 ай бұрын

    TOS is pretty much CPM 68K. When Atari approached DR about providing the OS and windowing shell for the ST they essentially lied to Atari and said that CPM for the 68000 was pretty much complete and they were already porting GEM to run on top of it. When Atari’s programmers showed up at DR after the deal was struck they found out CPM 68K was nowhere near complete and the GEM port was in a terrible state. They scrambled to complete TOS on their own and get GEM ported over to it. Dad Hacker had a great series of posts on this. It’s no longer on the Internet sadly but you can find his posts on the Internet Archive if you search there. The Amiga gets all the attention but they worked on that thing for, what, 3-4 years? Atari pumped out the STs in like a year in a mad scramble. It was a pretty amazing effort for what turned out to be the least-expensive of the 68K systems that - in many ways - was more capable than either the Mac or the Amiga, especially when it came to productivity software. Both of those platforms would eventually catch up and surpass the ST, but it took years and the machines remained considerably more expensive.

  • @stephencole9289
    @stephencole928910 ай бұрын

    One major usability annoyance on GEM (on the IBM PC anyway) was the mouse was NOT interrupt driven, and so its movement was not very responsive if any other significant cpu activity was going on.

  • @hintoninstruments2369

    @hintoninstruments2369

    2 ай бұрын

    As opposed to the Lisa where moving the mouse could stop all other activity.

  • @theserpentes
    @theserpentes6 ай бұрын

    IIRC, the IBM when it wanted to challenge Apple in personal computer business, it was about to buy the Atari ST 520 as to become IBM PC. This was told someone in Windows Weekly. But instead of that, IBM wanted the in-house control for the hardware. So the changes that we would have GEM 11 today was plausible...

  • @armorgeddon

    @armorgeddon

    2 ай бұрын

    That can't be the case though, since the IBM was on the market way before the Atari ST 520 was developed.

  • @zarjesve2
    @zarjesve210 ай бұрын

    One can find Steve Jobs opinion about Amiga on internet. - Before Commodore bought Amiga, Amiga Inc. was desperately looking for buyer for sometime so they present Amiga even to Steve Jobs (among Philips, Sony, Jack Tramiel... and many others)

  • @pigknickers2975
    @pigknickers297510 ай бұрын

    I bought an Atari ST in 87 having dropped out of CompSci at UEA where I was introduced to Macs. It was so bad, I couldn't believe it. Still shaped my life leading to much success. Bought my firsty actual Mac in 97 and didn't look back.

  • @JayRCela
    @JayRCela Жыл бұрын

    back in the day I really thought the GEM desktop was going to go mainstream. LOL / that did not happen / thanks for the wonderful video :_)

  • @ctrlaltrees

    @ctrlaltrees

    Жыл бұрын

    Real shame it was nipped in the bud when it was, it was very advanced for its time. I guess Digital Research just weren't in a position to fight that particular battle.

  • @cptnkrenon
    @cptnkrenon Жыл бұрын

    Apple's gonna Apple... What a shower of 'copper nanotubes'.

  • @joefell5311
    @joefell5311 Жыл бұрын

    So many shrewd business practices back in the day to be at the top of the computing industry.

  • @lorensims4846
    @lorensims48464 ай бұрын

    The Atari ST was commonly referred to as the "Jackintosh" because of the similarity of the user interface. I really wanted a Macintosh, but I couldn't afford one. I could afford a used Atari ST. I wanted to get used to the whole mouse, windowing interface that had identified the Macintosh. I had really wanted a Lisa but who in the world could have afforded one of those. It's ridiculous that Steve Jobs would sue Digital Research for stealing what Apple had stolen from Xerox Parc.

  • @GarthBeagle
    @GarthBeagle Жыл бұрын

    Nice overview!

  • @mesterak
    @mesterak Жыл бұрын

    Awesome vid thank you!

  • @airfixer9461
    @airfixer9461 Жыл бұрын

    Great Gem review, loved it...congrats with that :-)

  • @punkerts7711
    @punkerts7711 Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting. I'll always wondered why this version of GEM didn't have over lapping windows. Now I know the dark history. Thankfully they didn't killed the Amiga Workbench. Or did they..? 🤔

  • @daishi5571

    @daishi5571

    9 ай бұрын

    Commodore didn't need any outside help to sabotage the Amiga. it was an inside job.

  • @jamesdecross1035
    @jamesdecross1035 Жыл бұрын

    So, where does/did GEOS on the Commodore 8-bit machines fit in? Never released, as supposedly Commodore rejected it, it was developed in Germany before the Apple Macintosh, so it is said.

  • @bombtwenty3867
    @bombtwenty386710 ай бұрын

    AFAIK they also went after Acorn Computers with their range of ABCs Acorn Business Computers

  • @paul_boddie

    @paul_boddie

    7 ай бұрын

    More details of this would be very interesting indeed. The ABC 300 series was the first machine to publicly demonstrate GEM, although the nature of the software was a secret at the time. I can easily imagine, however, that a brief stroll over to the University of Cambridge to talk to some people might have dug up a bit of prior art. Or, as noted elsewhere in these comments, a chat to a few people at ICL whose PERQ workstation (developed by Three Rivers) had already demonstrated various litigated features. The ABC range was never launched as intended, anyway, including the ABC 300 series, largely because Acorn were in the process of being bailed out and refocused. Acorn's ARM-based operating systems exhibited plenty of graphical user interface features, presumably without any fear of predatory litigation from Apple.

  • @_Thrackerzod
    @_Thrackerzod Жыл бұрын

    "Gooey".

  • @elmariachi5133
    @elmariachi51334 ай бұрын

    Jobs was good at suing others for using ideas he had taken from others before.

  • @Rouxenator
    @Rouxenator Жыл бұрын

    Jobs shoulda gotten a Cobian headache sooner.

  • @videooblivion
    @videooblivion7 күн бұрын

    So, there are many things that contributed to the downfall of Commodore computer, too. Chief among them was the Cadtrak lawsuit. I can't recall where I read this, but when Cadtrak went after Apple, and they agreed to settle, one of the terms of the settlement was: you go after Commodore next. I will never forgive Apple for that. Yes, I'm aware it's business. I'm aware of the litany of excuses and justifications, thank you. I'm even writing this on a MacBook; but I will never forgive them.

  • @Pedro8k
    @Pedro8k10 ай бұрын

    Gem could have been so much more it worked well on the Atari st

  • @PaulSpades
    @PaulSpades9 ай бұрын

    After how much DR got shafted, I think if Gary would've been more of an asshole, we'd all be running significantly better software today. I wonder what digital research would've come up with as a successor for CP/M and Gem. How would the software landscape look like with DR leading the way, instead of MS playing dirty.

  • @AquMead
    @AquMead7 ай бұрын

    Hmmm… GEM graphical user interface on Atari early 90s, looks familiar MacOS. 5:45. That mean GUI MacOS is stolen idea from GEM/Atari. 😒

  • @Sl1pstreams

    @Sl1pstreams

    7 ай бұрын

    A great deal of the OS X UI was ripped from MultiTOS/TOS 4.0, just as a large chunk of iOS was lifted and shifted from Palm webOS.

  • @P5ychoFox
    @P5ychoFox Жыл бұрын

    Funny that Xerox got copied.

  • @kirishima638

    @kirishima638

    7 ай бұрын

    Funny that you’re wrong.

  • @DeadCat-42
    @DeadCat-424 күн бұрын

    All these patent lawsuits just slowed the development and harmed the consumer. The exact opposite, of the mandate, of the US patent system.

  • @hadessuk
    @hadessuk Жыл бұрын

    I would consider the GEM/Apple/Xerox/Windows explanation you tell a wee bit of a simplification, especially after having read the Digital Antiquarian’s “Doing Windows” series. There are some things that even if not easily protected were Apple’s own, and Xerox certainly didn’t invent overlapping windows, they didn’t have them.

  • @ctrlaltrees

    @ctrlaltrees

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, I admit it's an abbreviated version of what was a very complicated situation at the time. I've bookmarked "Doing Windows" and will have a proper read through it later - thanks for the recommendation. 🙂

  • @paul_boddie

    @paul_boddie

    Жыл бұрын

    The Xerox Star absolutely did have them, though.

  • @MCNOISE666

    @MCNOISE666

    Жыл бұрын

    Smalltalk on the Alto had overlapping windows.

  • @zarjesve2

    @zarjesve2

    10 ай бұрын

    Xerox had so much more than overlapping windows... many things we still do not have (and probably won't)!

  • @MCNOISE666

    @MCNOISE666

    10 ай бұрын

    @@zarjesve2 They really were the revolutionaries that no one seems to want to accept or appreciate. PARC is a holy grail of computing, imo. Absolutely awe inspiring.

  • @telengardforever7783
    @telengardforever7783 Жыл бұрын

    I wish I got to know Gary Kildall. It's crazy to think of all the things he might have created if he didn't die. OS's are just now catching up to what he accomplished 30+ years ago.

  • @MKA_NET
    @MKA_NET Жыл бұрын

    Apple destroyed Gem. Microsoft destroyed GeoWorks.

  • @Kilroy_5150
    @Kilroy_51505 ай бұрын

    Steve Jobs was nothing of the 'genius' everyone thought him to be and everything the thief/asshole he really was. He stood on the shoulders of giants (engineers) and took ALL the credit for their work. In other words, Steve Jobs was the biggest "poser" in history. Woz was the real GENIUS. nuff said?

  • @liquidsnake6879
    @liquidsnake6879 Жыл бұрын

    This is a completely false premise, first of all, you can emulate a Xerox Star system from 1981 (the same GUI the Altos had, btw bet you didn't know Xerox had released a GUI based workstation to market before the Lisa, but they did and it's just something history forgot because it sold so poorly) and you'll see for yourself that you can't resize anything and you can't even drag icons, those were features that Apple was indeed the inventor of and weren't present on the Xerox GUI at any point before the release of the Lisa. Likewise the concept of a Desktop and even the bar menu at the top of the screen was invented by Apple and it's all missing from the Xerox GUI that Jobs saw. Thus the main accusation the video makes that Apple sued over things it didn't invent is manifestely false and a simple bit of research proves this, and additionally it's false to claim Gary Kildall was just too spineless to fight it out in court, he didn't because he didn't have a case, neither did Xerox in fact and Apple merely settled with them to shut them up more than anything cause they would've eventually lost in court and in fact some of the lawsuits were thrown out before even going on trial to due the statute of limitations having expired.

  • @randywatson8347
    @randywatson83479 ай бұрын

    Gem was pretty snappy on MS-DOS.

  • @Peter_S_
    @Peter_S_10 ай бұрын

    Not entirely accurate. The factual fail at 2 minutes 24 seconds revoked my like. The Alto interface was the root of it all, but Apple did invent and innovate on top of that original interface quite a bit and those Apple innovations were rolled into competitor's offerings. Those innovations were patented by Apple wherever they could, and prior art prevented patenting any of the Xerox core features. Apple defended the features they came up with in contrast to what is presented here. The revisionist and abridged depiction of the Apple-MS UI license battle is enough for me to pass on a subscribe or finishing the video. The MS "license" for using the Mac look and feel was obtained through extortion based on the renewal of the license for Applesoft BASIC being necessary for Apple's survival at that point.

  • @obvioustruth
    @obvioustruth7 ай бұрын

    But apple competed against ATARI in music and DTP industry, and Commodore wasn't any competition to apple at anything.

  • @bierundkippen720
    @bierundkippen7208 ай бұрын

    It's really hard to stand hearing the masses of spit on your lips during the video.

  • @kirishima638
    @kirishima6387 ай бұрын

    You need to do better research before making a video like this. You’re not giving Apple nearly enough credit for all the revolutionary work to improve the bare basics that they licensed from Xerox, like drop down menus, draggable icons, resizable windows, WYSIWYG printing, QuickDraw and more.

  • @Sl1pstreams

    @Sl1pstreams

    7 ай бұрын

    The Alto and Smalltalk had all of that (except QuickDraw, which was just Apple’s proprietary screen rendering system like Atari AES/VDI).

  • @kirishima638

    @kirishima638

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Sl1pstreams the alto did not have draggable icons

  • @paul_boddie

    @paul_boddie

    7 ай бұрын

    @@kirishima638 Is that where we're at now? Draggable icons? The Three Rivers PERQ had resizeable windows in 1979, and yes, they were overlapping windows as well. It was in their brochure, for heaven's sake. All of this "I invented it" nonsense is why we have patent trolls and a patent litigation industry, not to mention being completely disrespectful towards people who happened to implement the same things as part of getting on with their job. Apple deserve credit for evolving the baseline in the personal computer industry, not unconditional reverence and devotion. They get enough credit as it is, anyway.

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