1.
Oh my, what an exaggeration. Windows 95 ignited tremendous growth in PC sales? Windows 95 was user friendly?
OK, first of all, OS/2 had a vastly superior interface, and was a more secure operating system. The internet was out well before Windows 95, actually, in a lesser form since pretty much since microcomputers in one sense. There were early ones like online services like Compuserve, and Prodigy came a bit later (a weird joint project between IBM and Sears), and of course the BBS was very popular earlier on. Windows 95 spurring the internet is roughly as accurate as saying Al Gore invented it.
Saying Windows 95, with its primitive interface that was still carried over until Windows 2K (Windows XP seems a bit more feminized) , was the first user friendly interface is even less accurate than saying Al Gore invented the Internet. As mentioned, OS/2 was around before then, and actually selling in the millions. The interface, The Workplace Shell, was much more powerful and intuitive than the rubbish Microsoft uses. Of course, then there was Apple with the MacIntosh. While not the most powerful interface, it was certainly intuitive.
Windows 95 was a bridge technology, and always intended to be one. It was around the same time other things happened, but it was not the cause. Windows 3.0/3.1 were wildly successful before that, too successful in fact since it caused IBM and Microsoft to split ways on OS/2. Microsoft was also working on Windows NT, but knew this OS was not compatible enough with DOS and Windows 3.x apps to become mainstream. So, they made a Mickey Mouse operating system called Windows 95 that was less reliable than Windows NT, and more compatible. Windows NT could never become compatible and secure, since DOS apps were given full access to the hardware and NT could not allow this. After all, if an application crashed the system on a DOS machine, who cared? It only crashed itself. If you do it on a multitasking operating system, you crashed the entire system; every other application was crashed too. NT and OS/2 were intended to protect applications from each other, and did with varying degrees of success. Windows 95/98/ME were less stable but more compatible, so people would buy this to run their apps. Microsoft then created a proper way to create apps by using APIs and not writing directly to hardware. By making the APIs the same, the Apps would run on both 95 and NT. So, 95 bridged people to NT; it was compatible enough to get people to use it, which caused developers to write applications for it. Of course, these applications would work for NT as well, as I mentioned, so NT developed a solid software base. When Microsoft finally killed Windows 95/98/ME, no one really cared because by this time compatibility was not an issue for Windows NT/2K/XP.
That is all Windows 95 was, a bridging operating system. It was not the greatest invention since the Atom Bomb, did not profoundly change the world or even computing. Everything that happened would have happened with or without that lousy OS. It did with OS/2, Apple and Windows NT. Even WFW 3.11 could access the internet.
OK, first of all, OS/2 had a vastly superior interface, and was a more secure operating system. The internet was out well before Windows 95, actually, in a lesser form since pretty much since microcomputers in one sense. There were early ones like online services like Compuserve, and Prodigy came a bit later (a weird joint project between IBM and Sears), and of course the BBS was very popular earlier on. Windows 95 spurring the internet is roughly as accurate as saying Al Gore invented it.
Saying Windows 95, with its primitive interface that was still carried over until Windows 2K (Windows XP seems a bit more feminized) , was the first user friendly interface is even less accurate than saying Al Gore invented the Internet. As mentioned, OS/2 was around before then, and actually selling in the millions. The interface, The Workplace Shell, was much more powerful and intuitive than the rubbish Microsoft uses. Of course, then there was Apple with the MacIntosh. While not the most powerful interface, it was certainly intuitive.
Windows 95 was a bridge technology, and always intended to be one. It was around the same time other things happened, but it was not the cause. Windows 3.0/3.1 were wildly successful before that, too successful in fact since it caused IBM and Microsoft to split ways on OS/2. Microsoft was also working on Windows NT, but knew this OS was not compatible enough with DOS and Windows 3.x apps to become mainstream. So, they made a Mickey Mouse operating system called Windows 95 that was less reliable than Windows NT, and more compatible. Windows NT could never become compatible and secure, since DOS apps were given full access to the hardware and NT could not allow this. After all, if an application crashed the system on a DOS machine, who cared? It only crashed itself. If you do it on a multitasking operating system, you crashed the entire system; every other application was crashed too. NT and OS/2 were intended to protect applications from each other, and did with varying degrees of success. Windows 95/98/ME were less stable but more compatible, so people would buy this to run their apps. Microsoft then created a proper way to create apps by using APIs and not writing directly to hardware. By making the APIs the same, the Apps would run on both 95 and NT. So, 95 bridged people to NT; it was compatible enough to get people to use it, which caused developers to write applications for it. Of course, these applications would work for NT as well, as I mentioned, so NT developed a solid software base. When Microsoft finally killed Windows 95/98/ME, no one really cared because by this time compatibility was not an issue for Windows NT/2K/XP.
That is all Windows 95 was, a bridging operating system. It was not the greatest invention since the Atom Bomb, did not profoundly change the world or even computing. Everything that happened would have happened with or without that lousy OS. It did with OS/2, Apple and Windows NT. Even WFW 3.11 could access the internet.
[Posted by: ta152h | Date: 08/25/05 01:57:32 AM]





