Screenshots of Old Desktop OSes

(typewritten.org)

260 points | by adunk 6 hours ago

48 comments

  • vessenes 9 minutes ago
    Amazing walk through memory lane, and super useful. One big omission though - starting in the early 1990s, we should be seeing some Linux desktops in there, but I didn’t see any through 1995 or so when I stopped browsing. Also, Irix would be nice to get — although I don’t recall if SGI had much in the way of custom vibes for their window managers, they certainly had amazingly cool 3D demos.

    A nice vibe coding project here would be to show these in a carousel with the UI being 1:1 pixels. It’s hard to understand just how different NeXTStep (Did I capitalize that correctly?) felt from Windows — part of it was refresh rates, but part of it was going from 800x600 to 1132x800-ish on the monitor. Color, refresh rates, monitor quality, a cool plastic color and design for the box were all part of the experience.

    • dotancohen 2 minutes ago
      I may have some KDE 2 and 3 screenshots to add.
  • bronlund 3 hours ago
    I can't help thinking about how much we have lost. Just finding the scrollbar nowadays can be a challenge. Not to mention if you want to resize a pane - in some applications they seem to have taken extra steps to make it difficult to find the line to grab.
    • pjc50 2 hours ago
      Operating systems of that era were designed based on UX research to help people use the unfamiliar operating system.

      Subsequent ones were designed by UI designers, and opinionated senior managers, who already knew how to use them, and took out usability features to make them "look nicer". This sort of worked when the opinionated manager was Steve Jobs. Most managers are not Steve Jobs.

      > in some applications they seem to have taken extra steps to make it difficult to find the line to grab

      Pet peeve of mine in Windows where the line is at most one pixel now. They also took away the coloured distinction between title bars for the active window, so you don't know where keystrokes are going to go.

      • abanana 5 minutes ago
        > Operating systems of that era were designed based on UX research

        Too many developers nowadays don't know this. On any HN discussion of UIs, I've been noticing a growing number of younger devs insisting that usability is entirely subjective (their words, not mine). It's not just that they don't know about cleverly thought-out things such as safe triangles in nested menus or all the affordances/signifiers espoused by Don Norman et al. The bigger problem is that they don't know what they don't know, and they come across as being unwilling to learn.

        It does make UX discussions frustrating and meaningless when they could, and should, be interesting and a learning experience for us all.

      • andai 25 minutes ago
        Chesterton's fence! Don't delete something unless you know why it's there in the first place.
    • BoppreH 42 minutes ago
      We also lost clearly identifiable buttons, loading bars (replaced with throbbers), status bars that tell you what you're hovering over and what the program is doing, stable UIs to develop muscle memory, etc.

      But we did gain some nice things!

      - Tabs.

      - Titlebar buttons and other space-saving measures.

      - Document editors remembering unsaved changes.

      - Forms that validate on focus lost, instead of submission.

      - Ctrl+P menus to fuzzy-search all actions and settings.

      - Easy syncing (if I open Spotify on any device I'll see the same playlists, my clipboard is shared between phone/desktop/notebook, Immich integrates local and remote media, etc).

      - Program-specific URL protocols, so that you can click on a link and have it open in a separate program (like `steam://open/games`).

      • alberto-m 21 minutes ago
        I appreciate this balanced take! Let's hope one day we'll get the best of today's and yesterday's era.
      • andai 21 minutes ago
        There was a brief moment in history where we had the best of both worlds.

        I grew up with Windows XP. We had most of these (except the titlebar buttons — although on second thought some custom Windows Media Player skins did have that, haha).

        We all carried USB sticks around. So you always had your files with you. The computer itself was interchangeable, for the most part. (Which also led to my interest in portable apps.)

    • Liftyee 5 minutes ago
      I'm curious - how often do you use the scrollbar? For me, almost never (or only as an indication of progress through a document). I'm scrolling only with wheel or arrows or PgUp etc.

      Perhaps though this is learned behaviour from scrollbars being tiny. I'd rather have the extra screen space. The scrollbar is usually a nuisance when I accidentally touch it (touchscreen) and the page jumps away.

    • saw-lau 34 minutes ago
      One of my biggest bugbears is losing the OK/Apply/Cancel concept with dialog boxes or settings windows. If I have a window with lots of settings that I want to experiment with then I've no problem with that setting taking effect immediately, but please give me the ability to back out all the changes I've tentatively made via a Cancel button.
    • CalRobert 27 minutes ago
      I still want alt+underlined letter for menus.

      Ubuntu is great for resizing - alt + middle click anywhere on the window. If only other OS'es could do the same.

      • Measter 15 minutes ago
        Microsoft's PowerToys did add that in (I think) the last version. Alt + Left click moves, alt + right click resizes.
      • andai 21 minutes ago
        Yeah, this is the one thing about Linux I constantly miss when using anything else.

        I wonder how hard it would be to make a thing for that...

    • Unai 22 minutes ago
      Have you been unable to find a DE or a DE theme with that type of UI/UX? I haven't looked into it, since I don't have these issues and prefer a more modern look, but surely there must be options out there if that's what you want.
      • dijit 18 minutes ago
        I think the parent is lamenting the lack of this in a commercially viable DE, like MacOS or Windows.

        As much as it pains me to say it: custom Linux distros are not often deployed en masse. Especially not the ones that “look old”.

    • RcouF1uZ4gsC 45 minutes ago
      Just finding a drag able area of the window to reposition it is a huge pain.
  • jchw 4 hours ago
    Probably also worth dropping this here in the off chance someone here will be part of today's lucky 10,000. http://toastytech.com/guis/

    At first glance it looks like this is much more breadth over depth. Quite an array of systems here.

  • wink 7 minutes ago
    OK, does anyone actually remember if half of the systems of the 80s really had such perfect font rendering or is this just some emulation 'current version'?

    The first computers I used were 486 with DOS and early Pentiums with Windows 3.11 and nothing looked nearly as nice. Some of those old screenshots look A LOT better than stuff 10 years later that I used (incl MacOS 8 or 9).

    • WillAdams 1 minute ago
      Older OSs had pixel fonts, which were carefully hand-crafted --- vector fonts were something which folks dreamed about having, or which were accessed when using incredibly expensive printers.

      Font rendering on Windows 3.11 was pretty decent, so long as one used the nicer TrueType fonts --- Times New Roman and Arial had man _years_ of hinting effort by Monotype which kicked in at typically screen sizes --- that said, certain apps would still use the older pixel fonts Tms Rmn and Helv (over which Linotype sued for trademark infringement which is part of why Monotype got the contract) as well as the "vector fonts" Roman and Modern which are (one can still access them in Windows 11) stick/plotter fonts like to the Hershey fonts. When I bought my copy of Windows 3.0, I drove almost 100 miles into Richmond to get a copy of Adobe Type Manager 1.0 for Windows.

  • delta_p_delta_x 1 hour ago
    I really wish Windows 11 had a Windows 2000 mode. I want a grey, boxy UI, but I also want al the modern technologies Windows has introduced since—DirectStorage, D3D12, fast SSDs, device-independent pixels and vector UIs, all written directly against a Windows API that is modernised, safe, and easy to use. No React, no ads in my weather app; the only browser on my computer will be the browser itself.
  • hermitcrab 1 hour ago
    Invisible scroll bars are a source of constant annoyance. And it sometimes takes me several attempts to move a window, because of all the various clickable things without visible boundaries. Frustrating.
    • anthk 1 hour ago
      On GNU/Linux run this command, it will fix it for all the GTK based desktops, such as XFCE, Gnome and Mate:

                     gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface overlay-scrolling false
      
      Under Mac you might have a similar Cocoa setting or whatever is called (nsproperties?) with "defaults write".
      • hermitcrab 1 hour ago
        I'm on Windows and Mac. Not because I love them, but because that is where my customers are. Also I try to keep my computers fairly vanilla, so that they don't look too different to the user's computer when I do videos or screenshots of my software.
  • DVRC 1 hour ago
    The man behind this site is known for his skills of recoverying data from QIC tapes. Looking at the "Software Library" section makes me always wonder if it will be released at some point, since that there is some stuff that isn't on BitSavers or other sites.
  • jll29 3 hours ago
    My favorites:

    GEM + Ventura Publisher http://www.typewritten.org/Media/Images/ventura-publisher-1....

    Viewpoint http://www.typewritten.org/Media/Images/6085-viewpoint-2.0-p...

    AUX http://www.typewritten.org/Media/Images/aux-3.0.1.png

    It's suprising at first look that GEM tops my preferences but I recall having a very fond time on the Atari ST 520+. It had one of the best b/w monitors and TOS+GEM was orderly and uncluttered.

    Only preemptive multitasking and per-window menus were missing. As a plus, the OS was in ROM, so boot times were <1s.

  • lynndotpy 4 hours ago
    I love this kind of thing :) I finally have a second site to bookmark alongside this similar collection: https://guidebookgallery.org/screenshots
    • keyle 3 hours ago
      Irix 5 was so clean!
  • giamma 4 hours ago
  • aidos 3 hours ago
    Alleycat in CGA just hit me hard.

    For the people that didn’t live through this time, lining these images up makes it obvious why those that did speak of how visually impressive the Amiga was.

  • xnorswap 3 hours ago
    This leaves me kind of sad, that we've had such little innovation in desktop / window-managers for 30 years.

    Certainly it doesn't feel any easier to manage multiple windows than when we had a quarter of the screen space.

    • adrianwaj 2 hours ago
      I am starting to think the top half of the screen should be the desktop, the bottom half should be the start menu but already activated and full of programs. No conventional bottom panel-bar with a start button. A right-most column should exist that fills up with a list of opened windows. [1]

      When I first saw Win95 with a cleared desktop, I immediately thought - where has everything gone? Why is this empty? Decades later I still think it's cumbersome to have to look and press at bottom left to see all the programs every time.

      [1] proportions and locations can be set

      Also, a "sweep" button that quickly clears the desktop into a "desktop archive." I do that manually anyway with my own "sweep" folders. Every few months I delete and categorize within the sweep folder. Keeping the desktop clean and organized is the new frontier, especially as screens become smaller and people don't want to lose flow.

      Verbose response, but what are your thoughts? Maybe use voice recognition that uses lip-reading through a camera to launch or modify?

      Mice and keyboards are just so passe, right, but I wouldn't go so far as getting a brain chip? Maybe a spherical "touchball" that senses the pressure of each finger to move a cursor? Trackballs are too laborsome. I have my mouse on maximum sensitivity and acceleration anyway.

      • pjc50 1 hour ago
        Screen real estate is precious unless on the very largest screens. Especially vertical. I'm a big fan of being able to put the app list/bar on the right, keeping the maximum vertical space available and allowing its captions to be readable horizontally.

        > Maybe use voice recognition that uses lip-reading through a camera to launch or modify?

        This feels like the result of a competition to design the worst possible user interface. To about 5% of people it might be an accessibility feature, to everyone else it's worse, and people with beards, marks, or dark skinned faces are going to find it a disaster.

        • adrianwaj 1 hour ago
          "are going to find it a disaster."

          True, it's not a good solution and there is Subvocal Recognition (SVR) that detects electrical signals in the neck or jaw using pads. Hall effect keyboards are pretty good in terms of sensitivity I find.

          Lip reading by HAL was also a disaster for Frank Poole.

          Maybe a large screen that can easily be flipped vertical/horizontal would work well. People already do it with the their smartphones - why not stationary screens? Have the OS detect when it happens so it can make any predetermined layout changes. Maybe have it rotate using a small motor? Cable connections into a base unit to avoid entanglement.

          In terms of screens - I think two volume dials to adjust for brightness and another one for blue-light would be ideal. It should be super easy to do at a hardware level. On 24 hour programs if really pedantic. Maybe an external "volume dial" pad that can be plugged into a USB-C would be suffice and it could have a light and movement sensor as well to take a computer out of (and into) suspend and set the desired brightness according to the environment.

          There are rechargeable closet lights that already have movement and light sensors - just need to adapt it to a screen.

          • pjc50 14 minutes ago
            > Maybe a large screen that can easily be flipped vertical/horizontal would work well. People already do it with the their smartphones - why not stationary screens? Have the OS detect when it happens so it can make any predetermined layout changes. Maybe have it rotate using a small motor? Cable connections into a base unit to avoid entanglement.

            Good news: all of this except the motorization is already available from Dell and others. Common office setup. I often see people with one screen in portrait format for reading documents.

      • jaffa2 9 minutes ago
        I just turn off desktop icons. Bam! Problem of messy desktop goes away.
  • pedrogpimenta 4 hours ago
    This is like porn for me :)

    It's one of my favourite things, looking at and analyzing older interfaces. Some are lovely, some are cute, some are ugly, but most are... "naïve"? I love to think about the effort, the research, the trials and tribulations. I feel I will spend a great deal of time in this page!

    • repelsteeltje 3 hours ago
      > [..] lovely [..] cute [..] ugly [..] naive...

      First and foremost to me those screenshots are somewhat disappointing as they can't match my memories. NeXT, BeOS, Irix, OpenLook, SunOS, Arthur (imagine the diversity)... they were SO awesomely impressive at insanely high multi-sync CRT resolution.

      Reality simply can't match the mind's eye, at least not for me.

      • Keyframe 50 minutes ago
        I was thinking exactly the same. IRIX on a great Sony CRT is still awesome to just look at, to this day (I have _few_ SGIs). HP Vue, Solaris.. the greats.

        One that does seem to be an odd man out is Genera. What a concept.

  • jhbadger 34 minutes ago
    While I recognize many of these, I had no idea about the IBM Academic Operating System (a version of UNIX for their RT RISC workstations distinct from the normal IBM version AIX). There are just snippets of info about this OS on Wikipedia and other sites -- I wonder why IBM created it when they already had AIX.
  • redbell 3 hours ago
    I miss the old days. Thirty years ago, 64MB of RAM was considered a thing (http://www.typewritten.org/Media/Images/winnt-4.0-ppc-new.in...)
  • ahmedfromtunis 1 hour ago
    Can't help noticing how the interface and general mechanics of these old OSes were tightly coupled to the hardware. Both the makers and users of that era seemed to relish that vibe. I know I certainly do.

    However, that paradigm made computers daunting for anyone who wasn't an enthusiast. While I’m nostalgic for that level of transparency, I recognize that those hurdles stood in the way of mass adoption.

    We might lament how 'dull' or 'abstracted' modern software feels, but technology's primary purpose is utility, not just to be venerated as an artifact.

    THAT SAID, I still believe that user-friendliness isn't an excuse to strip away agency.

    Modern simplification shouldn't feel like a forced lobotomy of the OS (or any piece of software really). There’s no reason we can't have both: an interface that stays out of the way for the average user, while providing total control for power users.

    Whatever happened to progressive disclosure?

  • tomhow 5 hours ago
    Previously:

    Historical workstation desktop interface screenshots - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36191713 - June 2023 (55 comments)

    Retrotechnology – PC desktop screenshots from 1983-2005 - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15968745 - Dec 2017 (58 comments)

  • nickdothutton 32 minutes ago
    Nostalgic for VAXstation/DECwindows terminals where at the time the monitor weighed more than I did.
  • mananaysiempre 4 hours ago
    Where did the author get a copy of pre-X-integration NeWS, I wonder (if indeed they did). I haven’t been able to locate one online after a lot of determined searching, but I also can’t bring myself to declare that there isn’t one because the name is so ungoogleable.
    • DVRC 17 minutes ago
      He also got Parallax P/NeWS in his collection, which is super rare. I also wrote a person who has a SunDew QIC cassette, and another has various NeWS sources (including the portable REF tree of the 1.1 version). Unfortunately they haven't released them yet, because of the unknown copyright situation. Another person has the OpenWindows 1.0 binary tapes for Sun-3 and Sun-4, among other stuff.

      https://github.com/larsbrinkhoff/bagley-nottingham-tapes

      For now we have the sources of NeWS 1.1 (and operators.h if you look more in depth) and X/NeWS 2.0. I also have the RBuss sources (an incomplete clone), but I have to ask the author if they can be put on the internet.

    • pell 50 minutes ago
      Have you checked the Don Hopkins archive yet?

      https://www.donhopkins.com/home/pub/

  • rschoultz 1 hour ago
    I distinctly remember, and found, the NeWS (Network extensible windowing sisten), where you could develop with PostScript(TM) for application windows.
    • DVRC 44 minutes ago
      Over time much NeWS related stuff resurfaced, wheter are application binaries, sources (both application and the server itself) or documentation, so anyone could play with them on a real machine (Sun-3 or SPARC) or inside QEMU SPARC. I'm waiting for a copy of "Portable NeWS 1.0" to be recovered, to see how much different the sources are compared to the 1.1 version.

      I also hope to see resurface binaries/sources of other server implementations, Sun Symbolic Programming Environment (which includes code originally developed at Schlumberger, including LispScript), the sources of the PdB compiler, CMU Andrew wm (although is not directly related, is the ancestor of this window system, from the same authors), and whatever is related to this system.

      It would be interesting a revival like Interlisp.

  • yjftsjthsd-h 4 hours ago
    It's funny how early some things do and don't look familiar. A decent chunk of unix-family OSs have changed some since then, but also kinda not. CDE 1.0 looks almost exactly like the latest version:)
  • piekvorst 1 hour ago
    No Plan 9. Otherwise, resources like this might help studying how the interfaces of the past evolved (at least, on the surface).
    • ori_b 1 hour ago
      The plan 9 interface has evolved quite a bit, but it's largely invisible in screenshots. The differences are in things like triple click behavior, jumps to insertion points, effective use of mouse cursor warping, chording.
      • lproven 3 minutes ago
        Screenshots -- or GIFs -- of Plan 9 compared with Inferno would be most instructive.

        The Plan 9 folks I've talked to are a bit shocked by this, but I preferred Inferno's GUI to plain old Rio/Acme etc.

  • darkwater 4 hours ago
    Let's talk about the HP-9000 as depicted in http://www.typewritten.org/Media/Images/hpwindows-starbase-u...

    There is a `man` entry displayed in a terminal window there. The first Unix I've ever touched was HP-UX on an HP-9000 (server series, not the workstation one), and I have this memory that the underlined words you can see in that manpage as well were actually hyperlinks you can select and would bring you to the relevant section of the manpage that discussed that term. Am I fabricating that memory or is it real? I cannot find any info about it on the Internet.

    • jll29 3 hours ago
      I started with HP-UX 9.03 on a PA-RISC-powered 715-75 (to use Emacs, our whole research group logged into the 735 server to edit there, which was faster than running it locally).

      Any unclean pointer fiddling in C, and the process was terminated by the OS, so the machine was wonderful to use as a development box (especially with Purify installed) for software that would later be run on Windows or Linux.

      I eventually bought my own refurbished (and using academic discount) 715 (instead of a car), so I had the fastest machine in our student dorm of anyone I knew, undergrad, grad student or professor. I could just write my Master's thesis when everyone else kept re-installing Windows - the HP never crashed in 6.5 years, which has left me with deep respect for the old-schol (pre-Compaq) HP engineers. The machine (21" color CRT) occupied half of my 9 square metre dorm room, but it also kept me warm.

    • yread 4 hours ago
      I thought only `info` had hyperlinks
      • darkwater 3 hours ago
        In the GNU world, indeed. And that's why it makes even harder for me to remember exactly, it was 30 years ago, I was clueless and also Linux was already "big enough" to have some Red Hat installed in some x86 PC in the same lab.
    • aa-jv 3 hours ago
      My 'first Unix' was MIPS Risc/OS, and it had that feature too.
  • arionmiles 2 hours ago
    For anyone pining for innovation in Desktop, a small part of this culture is still alive in Ricing competitions.

    A recent favorite of mine is this one. Timestamp starts at the final submission being reviewed: https://youtu.be/DxEKF0cuEzc?si=mqE_2vpKDBsMWlKW&t=557

  • prevailrob 1 hour ago
    Them beOS icons were lovely at the time
  • theletterf 2 hours ago
    I love old desktop OSes so much I've created a Windows 3.1 theme for mine: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47909295
  • sthuck 3 hours ago
    I kinda miss that in the early 2000's kde and gnome shipped with a fuck ton of window decorations based on all those (then-not-so) old OS. Teenager me had fun switching them every day and playing with windowing behavior (focus follows mouse! hover to select and only one click needed!). I wonder what techy kids today do to explore and have fun.

    Speaking of the early 2000's, man, Aqua was such a good design. I appreciate the nextstep paradigm and design, but Aqua was just so futuristic, in a good way.

    • somat 2 hours ago
      In some ways X11 with it's focus follows mouse, don't raise on focus, select:middle click paste features provide a far more refined desktop experience then mac or windows ever could. No wait, stop laughing, sure X11 was a garbage fire when it came to consistent professional design, but because it was such a wild west of an environment there was place for real ui innovation. I know, I get grumpy fast without middle click paste. And I hate having to raise a window in order to click and type on it(A common access pattern for me is to read docs on the top window while I am operating the bottom window).
      • lstodd 55 minutes ago
        Cut-buffer (the middle click) I just can't live without. People that never experienced that still get awestruck with the ease and effortlessness.

        And virtual desktops/workspaces also had that awe-effect back then. Although with multimonitor setups this faded a bit.

    • hermitcrab 1 hour ago
      Yes Aqua was quite striking. Also much more consistent than the rag bag of different styling you see on Windows or Mac today.
    • eloisant 2 hours ago
      Even before those, AfterStep, Enlightenment and many others were really nice.
  • daneel_w 2 hours ago
    I'm sure someone reading this thread has UAE handy in order to contribute a screenshot of AmigaOS/Workbench 1.x.
  • q8zd3 1 hour ago
    I was not ready to start my day with a OS/2 Warp nostalgia feeling
  • jmclnx 12 minutes ago
    xfm from the first Slackware print, I really liked that file manager. But these days it fails to work. I tied many years ago to get it work but failed :(
  • andsoitis 5 hours ago
    Year of release for each would be extra awesome.
  • jeffreygoesto 4 hours ago
  • Terr_ 4 hours ago
    > DECWindows

    > /tmp/med_16.sixel

    ... Is that Sinfest? From before the author went weird? If so, then that's certainly a very different way of feeling old than I expected when clicking the link.

    P.S.: There's another in "RiscOS 3.71", and "System V Release 4 Amiga Version 1.1" references Penny Arcade. [0]

    [0] https://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2005/01/05/the-merch#

  • bsdooby 4 hours ago
    Even the site with its NeXTStep style (love it).
  • zargath 2 hours ago
    great list, would be cool to see each OS evolving over time.

    NextStep/OSX was the only desktop OS that did not feel like a downgrade from Amiga Workbench

  • inatreecrown2 4 hours ago
    What a wonderful resource! HP VUE has interesting color choices and a nice "Dock"
  • andrewstuart 2 hours ago
    The Cambrian period of operating systems and GUIs.
  • logotype 2 hours ago
    Deeply nostalgic! Thanks for sharing.
  • oniony 3 hours ago
    I love how little df has changed since 1985.
  • shevy-java 1 hour ago
    GEM Desktop 1.2 looks sooooooo like the ancient Apple operating systems. I first saw this on a friends' parents computer and was quite astonished why computers may look like that. I was very used to Windows/DOS back then.

    I am also glad to have switched to Linux in 2004 already. Once you have been using Linux for a while, whenever I use windows I am annoyed at how slow it is. Just file copy operations alone and then billion excuses windows developers make, trying to copsplain why it is so slow. When I have to backup 30GB, I don't want an explanation why it is slow - I simply use what is faster. And that's just one advantage of many more Linux has. (I use the commandline most of the time though, so KDE and GNOME are IMO just pointless eyecandy these days.)

  • tardedmeme 29 minutes ago
    "403 Forbidden"
  • livinglist 3 hours ago
    Sometime I wish time goes slower
  • FergusArgyll 2 hours ago
    There's a lot of nostalgia in the comments here. I wonder if any reader under say 25 is willing to comment; do you think OS's today are a regression? do those look better?

    To me they look unwieldy, heavy and overwhelming and I can't help but think the love for them is just the love for youth or whatever

    • hermitcrab 1 hour ago
      There is definitely an element of nostalgia. However, a lot of earlier desktop OS GUIs do seem to be more internally consistent and with more emphasis on usability than the current crop. I think part of the issue is that things that might make sense on a phone have bled into desktop OSes, where they make a lot less sense.
      • FergusArgyll 1 hour ago
        I don't mean this in a dismissive way but based on your profile I'd say you're > 25. I'm curious about the perspective of someone who didn't grow up with the those os's
        • funimpoded 26 minutes ago
          You’ll need an under-25 who’s both used some of these enough to really understand them, and has watched others of mixed expertise levels use them, to get a meaningful opinion. Screenshots don’t cut it, for the same reason as why modern UIs can look slick in screenshots or a demo then be frustrating in actual use.

          That person’s gonna be very rare, while lots of over-25s have that experience.

        • hermitcrab 1 hour ago
          25 is a very distant memory. ;0)
  • BoredPositron 3 hours ago
    That brings back memories from pre press days and the SGI Indigo machines. They did some heavy lifting for the time.
  • grebc 5 hours ago
    Amazing resource!
  • barrenko 4 hours ago
    "We have learned nothing in 10,000 years."
    • grebc 4 hours ago
      Probably more accurately 40-45 years.
    • WalterGR 4 hours ago
      I don’t see any pie menus, so I’m leaning towards agreement...
      • mananaysiempre 4 hours ago
        Patents are very good at stifling progress and learning, even bogus ones.
  • vladsiu 4 hours ago
    [dead]