History Of Mac O S

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History of Mac OS From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation , search This article needs additional citations for verification . Please help improve this article by adding reliable references . Unsourced material may be challenged and removed . (June 2008) Apple marketed its operating system software as "Mac OS", beginning in 1997. On January 24 , 1984 , Apple Computer, Inc. (now Apple Inc. ) introduced the Macintosh personal computer , with the Macintosh 128K model, which came bundled with the Mac OS operating system , then known as the System Software. [citation needed ] The Macintosh is often credited with popularizing the graphical user interface . The Mac OS has been pre-installed on almost every Macintosh computer ever sold. The operating system is also sold separately at Apple retail stores, and online. The original Mac OS was partially based on the Lisa OS , previously released by Apple for the Lisa computer in 1983 and, as part of an agreement allowing Xerox to buy shares in Apple at a favourable rate, it also used concepts from the Xerox PARC Xerox Alto which Steve Jobs and several other Macintosh team members had previewed. Contents [hide ] 1 Early history

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Transcript of History Of Mac O S

Page 1: History Of  Mac  O S

History of Mac OSFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, searchThis article needs additional citations for verification.Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2008)

Apple marketed its operating system software as "Mac OS", beginning in 1997.

On January 24, 1984, Apple Computer, Inc. (now Apple Inc.) introduced the Macintosh personal computer, with the Macintosh 128K model, which came bundled with the Mac OS operating system, then known as the System Software.[citation needed] The Macintosh is often credited with popularizing the graphical user interface. The Mac OS has been pre-installed on almost every Macintosh computer ever sold. The operating system is also sold separately at Apple retail stores, and online. The original Mac OS was partially based on the Lisa OS, previously released by Apple for the Lisa computer in 1983 and, as part of an agreement allowing Xerox to buy shares in Apple at a favourable rate, it also used concepts from the Xerox PARC Xerox Alto which Steve Jobs and several other Macintosh team members had previewed.

Contents

[hide] 1 Early history

o 1.1 Development o 1.2 Release

2 System 1, 2, 3 & 4 3 System Software 5 4 System Software 6 5 System 7

o 5.1 Mac OS 7.6 o 5.2 Version history

6 Mac OS 8 7 Mac OS 9 8 Mac OS X 9 Timeline

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10 See also 11 Notes 12 Further reading

13 External links

[edit] Early history

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[edit] Development

The Macintosh project started in early 1979 with Jef Raskin, who envisioned an easy-to-use, low-cost computer for the average consumer. In September 1979, Raskin was given permission to start hiring for the project and was, in particular, looking for an engineer that could put together a prototype. Bill Atkinson, a member of the Apple Lisa team, introduced him to Burrell Smith, a service technician who had been hired earlier that year.[citation needed]

In January 1981, Steve Jobs completely took over the Macintosh project. Jobs and a number of Apple engineers visited Xerox PARC in December 1979, three months after the Lisa and Macintosh projects had begun. After hearing about the pioneering GUI technology being developed at Xerox PARC from former Xerox employees like Raskin, Jobs negotiated a visit to see the Xerox Alto computer and Smalltalk development tools in exchange for Apple stock options. The final Lisa and Macintosh operating systems mostly used concepts from the Xerox Alto, but many elements of the graphical user interface were created by Apple including the menubar and pop-up menus.

Unlike the IBM PC, which used 8 kB of system ROM for power-on self-test (POST) and basic input/output system (BIOS), the Mac ROM was significantly larger (64 kB) and held key OS code. Much of the original Mac ROM was coded by Andy Hertzfeld, a member of the original Macintosh team. He was able to conserve some of the precious ROM space by interleaving some of the assembly language code. In addition to coding the ROM, he also coded the kernel, the Macintosh Toolbox and some of the desktop accessories (DAs) as well. The icons of the operating system, which represented folders and application software were designed by Susan Kare, who later designed the icons for Microsoft Windows 3.0. Bruce Horn and Steve Capps wrote the Macintosh Finder as well as a number of Macintosh system utilities.

Apple was very strong in advertising their newfound machine. After it was created, the company bought all 39 pages of advertisement space in the Newsweek magazine, 1984 November/December edition. Apple was so successful in its marketing for the Macintosh, that it quickly outshone its more sophisticated predecessor, the Lisa, in sales –

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so much so that Apple quickly developed a product called MacWorks which allowed the Lisa to emulate Macintosh system software through System 3, by which time it had been discontinued as the re-branded Macintosh XL. Many of Lisa's operating system advances would not appear in the Macintosh OS until System 7.

[edit] Release

Original 1984 Mac OS desktop

The first version of the Mac OS (simply called System) is easily distinguished between other operating systems from the same period because it does not use a command line interface; it was one of the first operating systems to use an entirely graphical user interface. Additional to the system kernel is the Finder, an application used for file management, which also displays the Desktop. The two files were contained in a folder directory labeled System Folder, which contained other resource files, like a printer driver, needed to interact with the System.

[edit] System 1, 2, 3 & 4

System Software 0.1

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System Software 0.3/0.5

System Software 0.7

System Software 2.0.1

These releases could only run one application at a time, though special application shells such as Switcher (discussed under MultiFinder) could work around this to some extent. System 1.0, 1.1, and 2.0 used a flat file system with only one kludged level of folders, called Macintosh File System (MFS); its support for folders (subdirectories) was incomplete. System 2.0 added support for AppleTalk and the newly introduced LaserWriter to use it. System 2.1 (Finder 5.0) introduced the HFS (Hierarchical File System) which had real directories. This version was specifically to support the Hard Disk 20 and only implemented HFS in RAM, startup and most floppy disks remained MFS 400K volumes. System 3.0 was introduced with the Mac Plus, officially implementing HFS and 800K startup drives and adding support for several new technologies including SCSI and AppleShare and introducing Trash "bulging" (i.e., when the Trash contained files, it would gain a bulged appearance). System 4.0 came with the Mac SE and Macintosh II, which required additional support for the first expansion slots, the Apple Desktop Bus (ADB), internal hard drives and on the Mac II, color, larger displays and the first Motorola 68020 processor.[1]

Changes in early Macintosh operating systems are best reflected in the version number of the Finder, where major leaps are found between 1.x, 4.x, 5.x, and 6.x.

System Software Release[2]

System Version[2] Release Date[2] Finder

Version[2]LaserWriter

Version[2] Release Information[2]

Mac System Software

1.0 (.97)[3] January 24[citation

needed], 19841.0 Initial Release

Mac System Software (0.1)

1.1[citation

needed]May 5[citation needed],

19841.1g Maintenance Release, Added

Mountain scene, About box,

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Clean Up Command

Mac System Software (0.3

& 0.5)2.0

April 1985[citation

needed] 4.1 Finder Update

System software[3]

[4] [5]

2.1[3] September 1985[3] 5.0[4][5] Release for Hard Disk 20

support[3][4][5]

Mac System Software (0.7)

3.0January

1986[citation needed] 5.1 1.1[citation needed] Introduced with Mac Plus[citation

needed]

System Software 1.0

3.1February

1986[citation needed] 5.2 1.1

System Software 1.1

3.2February[citation

needed] 19865.3 3.1

Fixed problems with data loss, system crashes; updated

Chooser and Calculator.[citation

needed]

System Software 2.0

3.3 January 1987 5.4 3.1 Release for Macintosh II and SE

System software[6] 3.4[6] 6.1[6] Release for Macintosh 512Ke

AppleShare 2.0 support[6]

System Software 2.01

4.0March 1987[citation

needed] 5.4 3.3Introduced AppleShare[citation

needed]

System Software 2.01

4.1April 1987[citation

needed] 5.5 4.0Maintenance Release of System Software. Updated LaserWriter

Driver

[edit] System Software 5

System Software 5 (also referred to as simply System 5) added MultiFinder, an extension which let the system run several programs at once. The system used a co-operative multitasking model, meaning that time was given to the background applications only when the running application yielded control. A clever change in system functions that applications were already calling to handle events made many existing applications share time automatically. Users could also choose to not use MultiFinder, and thus stick with using a single application at a time as in previous releases of the system software.

System Software 5 was also the first Macintosh operating system to be given a unified "Macintosh System Software" version number, as opposed to the numbers used for the System and Finder files.

System Software 5 was available for a very short time and only in some countries, including the United States.

System Software Release[2]

System Version[2]

Release Date[2]

Finder Version[2]

MultiFinder Version[2]

LaserWriter Version[2] Release Information[2]

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5.0 4.21987 circa

6.0 1.0 5.0 Initial Release

5.1 4.31988 circa

6.0 1.0 5.1Updated LaserWriter

Driver and new version of Apple HD SC Setup

[edit] System Software 6

System Software 6.0.8Main article: System 6

System Software 6 (also referred to simply as System 6) was a consolidation release of the Mac OS, producing a complete, stable, and long-lasting operating system. Two major hardware introductions requiring additional support under System 6 were the 68030 processor and 1.44MB SuperDrive debuting with the Macintosh IIx and Macintosh SE/30. Later it would include support for the first specialized laptop features with the introduction of the Macintosh Portable. From System 6 forward, the Finder would have a unified version number closely matching that of the System, alleviating much of the confusion caused by the often considerable differences between earlier Systems.[7]

System Version[2] Release Date[2] Finder

Version[2]MultiFinder

Version[2]LaserWriter

Version[2] Release Information[2]

6.0April, 1988[citation

needed] 6.1 6.0 5.2 Initial Release

6.0.1September

19[citation needed], 1988

6.1.1 6.0.1 5.2Release for Macintosh IIx

(1988)

6.0.2Late 1988[citation

needed] 6.1 6.0.1 5.2 Maintenance Release

6.0.3March 7[citation

needed], 19896.1 6.0.3 5.2

Release for Macintosh IIcx (1989)

6.0.4September

20[citation needed], 1989

6.1.4 6.0.4 5.2Release for Macintosh

Portable and IIci (1989)

6.0.5March 19[citation

needed], 19906.1.5 6.0.5 5.2

Release for Macintosh IIfx (1990)

6.0.6October 15[citation

needed], 19906.1.6 6.0.6 5.2

Not released because of AppleTalk bug [8]

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6.0.7October 16[citation

needed], 19906.1.7 6.0.7 5.2

Official release for Macintosh LC, IIsi and

Classic (1990)

6.0.8April, 1991[citation

needed] 6.1.8 6.0.8 7.0Updated printing software

to match software of System 7.0

6.0.8LLate 1991/Early 1992[citation needed]

6.1.8[citation

needed] 6.0.8[citation needed] 7.0[citation needed] Limited maintenance release for Pacific customers

[edit] System 7

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Main article: System 7

On May 13, 1991 System 7 was released. It was the second major upgrade to the Mac OS, adding a significant user interface overhaul, new applications, stability improvements and many new features. Its introduction coincided with the release of and provided support for the 68040 Macintosh line.

Perhaps the most significant feature of System 7 was page swapping support, which previously had only been available as a third-party add-on. Accompanying this was a move to 32-bit memory addressing, necessary for the ever-increasing amounts of RAM available to the Motorola 68030 CPU. Earlier versions of Mac OS had used the lower 24 bits for addressing, and the upper 8 bits for flags. This had been an effective solution for earlier Macintosh models with very limited amounts of RAM, but it became a liability[9] later. Apple described code that assumed the 24 + 8-bit addressing as being "not 32-bit clean", and most such applications would crash when 32-bit addressing was enabled by the user. The original Macs used the Motorola 68000 CPU which could address only 16 MB of memory. 24 Bits is all that is needed to address the 16MB memory space. This was a hardware limitation, not a system software design fault. The 68020/68030/68040 CPUs have 32-bit address buses and can address up to 4 GB of physical memory. As Apple moved to the 68030 CPU it needed to allow the use of more than 16 MB of memory. Thus the transition to 32-bit clean ROMs and software had to be implemented.

One notable System 7 feature was the built-in co-operative multitasking. In System Software 6, this function was optional through the MultiFinder. System 7 also introduced aliases, similar to shortcuts that were introduced in later versions of Microsoft Windows. System extensions were enhanced, by being moved to their own subfolder; a subfolder in the System Folder was also created for the control panels. In System 7.5, Apple included the Extensions Manager, a previously third-party program which simplified the process of enabling and disabling extensions.

The Apple menu, home only to desk accessories in System 6, was made more general-purpose: the user could now make often-used folders and applications—or anything else

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they desired—appear in the menu by placing aliases to them in an "Apple Menu Items" subfolder of the System Folder. AppleScript, a scripting language for automating tasks, was also introduced with System 7. 32-bit QuickDraw, supporting so-called "true color" imaging, was also included as standard; it was previously available as a system extension. TrueType, an outline font standard, was also introduced with System 7.

The Trash, under System 6 and earlier, would empty itself automatically when shutting down the computer or, if MultiFinder were not running, when launching an application. System 7 reimplemented the Trash as a special hidden folder, allowing files to remain in it across reboots until the user deliberately chose the "Empty Trash" command.

System 7.1 was mainly a bugfix release, with a few minor features added. System 7.1 was not only the first operating system to cost money (all previous versions were free or sold at the cost of the floppies), but also received a "Pro" sibling with extra features. System 7.1.2 was the first version to support PowerPC-based Macs. System 7.1 also introduced the System Enablers as a method to support new models without updating the actual System file. This led to extra files inside the system folder (one per new model supported) that some users found unpleasing.

System 7.5 introduced a large number of "high level" additions, considered by some to be less well thought-out than they could have been.[citation needed] Many of the new features were based on shareware applications that Apple bought and included into the new system. On the newer PowerPC machines, System 7.5 was plagued by stability problems due partly to a new memory manager (which can be turned off), and poor OS handling of errors in PowerPC code (all PowerPC exceptions map to Type 11). These growing pains did not afflict the 68k-architecture machines.

[edit] Mac OS 7.6

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Stability improved in PPC Macs with Mac OS 7.6, which dropped the "System" moniker as a more-trademarkable name was needed in order to license the OS to the growing market of third-party Macintosh clone manufacturers. Mac OS 7.6 required a 68030 CPU and 32 bit clean ROMs, and so dropped support for many of the early Macs, including the Mac Plus and Mac II.

[edit] Version history

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System 7.0 (integrated MultiFinder always enabled) System 7.0.1 (introduced with LC II and Quadra series)

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System 7 Tuner (update for both 7.0 and 7.0.1) System 7.1 System 7.1 Pro (version 7.1.1, combined with PowerTalk, Speech Manager &

Macintalk, Thread Manager) System 7.1.2 (first version for Macs equipped with a PowerPC processor) System 7.1.2P (only for Performa/LC/Quadra 630 series, very quickly replaced by

7.5) System 7.5 System 7.5.1 (System 7.5 Update 1.0 — the first Macintosh operating system to

call itself "Mac OS") System 7.5.2 (first version for Power Macs that use PCI expansion cards, usable

only on these Power Macs and PowerBooks 5300 and Duo 2300) System 7.5.3 (System 7.5 Update 2.0) System 7.5.3L (only for Mac clones) System 7.5.3 Revision 2 System 7.5.3 Revision 2.1 (only for Performa 6400/180 and 6400/200) System 7.5.4, released very briefly and withdrawn within hours. Replaced by

7.5.5 System 7.5.5 Last to support non-32 bit clean Macs, including all with less than a

68030 CPU. Mac OS 7.6 (name formally changed because of the experimental clone program,

although System 7.5.1 and later used the "Mac OS" name on the splash screen) Mac OS 7.6.1 Proper PowerPC error handling introduced.

Performas used to have their own, exclusive operating system before they were merged into System 7.5.

System 7.0.1P System 7.1P System 7.1P1 System 7.1P2 System 7.1P3 (last release with new features) System 7.1P4 System 7.1P5 System 7.1P6

[edit] Mac OS 8

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Main article: Mac OS 8

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Mac OS 8.1 desktop

Mac OS 8 was released on July 26, 1997, shortly after Steve Jobs returned to the company. It was mainly released to keep the Mac OS moving forward during a difficult time for Apple. Initially planned as Mac OS 7.7, it was renumbered "8" to exploit a legal loophole to accomplish Jobs's goal of terminating third-party manufacturers' licenses to System 7 and shutting down the Macintosh clone market.[citation needed] 8.0 added a number of features from the stillborn Copland project, while leaving the underlying operating system unchanged. A multi-threaded Finder was included, enabling better multi-tasking. The GUI was changed in appearance to a new shaded greyscale look called Platinum, and the ability to change the appearance themes (also known as skins) was added with a new control panel. This capability was provided by a new "appearance" API layer within the OS, one of the few significant changes.

Apple sold 1.2 million copies of Mac OS 8 in its first two weeks of availability and 3 million within six months. In light of Apple's financial difficulties at the time, there was a large grassroots movement among Mac users to upgrade and 'help save Apple'. Even some pirate groups refused to redistribute the OS.[citation needed]

Mac OS 8.1 saw the introduction of an updated version of the Hierarchical File System called HFS Plus, which fixed many of the limitations of the earlier system (HFS Plus continues to be used in Mac OS X). There were some other interface changes such as separating network features from printing (the venerable, and rather odd Chooser was at last headed for retirement), and some improvements to application switching. However, in underlying technical respects, Mac OS 8 was not very different from System 7.

Mac OS 8.5 focused on speed and stability, with lots of old 68k code replaced by modern code native to the PowerPC. It also improved the appearance on the system, although the theming feature was cut late in development.

Mac OS 8.0 (first version to require a 68040 processor, dropping support for the remainder of the Macintosh II series and other 68030 Macs)

Mac OS 8.1 (last version to run on a 68K processor, added support for USB on the Bondi iMac, added support for HFS+)

Mac OS 8.5 (first version to run only on a PowerPC processor, added built-in support for Firewire on the PowerMac G3)

Mac OS 8.5.1

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Mac OS 8.6 (included a new nanokernel for improved performance and Multiprocessing Services 2.0 support, added support for the PowerPC G4 processor)

[edit] Mac OS 9

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Main article: Mac OS 9

Mac OS 9 was released on October 23, 1999. It was generally a steady evolution from Mac OS 8. Early development releases of Mac OS 9 were numbered 8.7. Mac OS 9 added improved support for AirPort wireless networking. It introduced an early implementation of multi-user support (though not considered a true multi-user operating system by modern standards). An improved Sherlock search engine added several new search plug-ins. Mac OS 9 also provided a much improved memory implementation and management. AppleScript was improved to allow TCP/IP and networking control. Mac OS 9 also made the first use of the centralized Apple Software Update to find and install OS and hardware updates. Other new features included its on-the-fly file encryption software with code signing and Keychain technologies, Remote Networking and File Server packages and much improved list of USB drivers.

Mac OS 9 also added some transitional technologies to help application developers adopt some Mac OS X features before the introduction of the new OS to the public, again easing the transition. These included new APIs for the file system, and the bundling of the Carbon library that apps could link against instead of the traditional API libraries — apps that were adapted to do this can be run natively on Mac OS X as well. Other changes were made in Mac OS 9 to allow it to be booted in the "classic environment" within Mac OS X. This is a compatibility layer in Mac OS X (in fact a Mac OS X application, originally codenamed the "blue box") that runs a complete Mac OS 9 operating system, so allowing applications that have not been ported to Carbon to run on Mac OS X. This is reasonably seamless, though "classic" applications retain their original Mac OS 8/9 appearance and do not gain the Mac OS X "Aqua" appearance.

Mac OS 9.0 Mac OS 9.0.2 Mac OS 9.0.3 Mac OS 9.0.4 Mac OS 9.1 Mac OS 9.2 Mac OS 9.2.1 Mac OS 9.2.2

[edit] Mac OS X

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Main article: History of Mac OS X

Mac OS X (pronounced /mæk o ʊ ɛ s t ɛ n/ )[10] is the line of graphical operating systems developed, marketed, and sold by Apple Inc. which succeeded the original Mac OS, which had been Apple's primary operating system since 1984. Unlike the earlier Macintosh operating system, Mac OS X is a Unix-based operating system[11] built on technology developed at NeXT from the second half of the 1980s until early 1997, when Apple purchased the company.[12]

The first version was Mac OS X Server 1.0 in 1999, which retained the earlier Mac operating system's "platinum" appearance and even resembled OPENSTEP in places. The desktop-oriented version, Mac OS X v10.0, followed in March 2001 sporting the new Aqua user interface. Since then, six more distinct "end-user" and "server" versions have been released, most recently Mac OS X v10.5 in October 2007. Releases of Mac OS X are named after big cats. For example, Apple calls Mac OS X v10.5 "Leopard," while its previous release was called "Tiger."

Versions of Mac OS X:

Mac OS X v10.0 (Cheetah) Mac OS X v10.1 (Puma) Mac OS X v10.2 (Jaguar) Mac OS X v10.3 (Panther) Mac OS X v10.4 (Tiger) Mac OS X v10.5 (Leopard) Mac OS X v10.6 (Snow Leopard)

[edit] Timeline