Difference between revisions of "Xerox PARC"

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* [https://xeroxparcarchive.computerhistory.org/index.html Xerox PARC Interim File System (IFS) archive]
 
* [https://xeroxparcarchive.computerhistory.org/index.html Xerox PARC Interim File System (IFS) archive]
 
** [https://xeroxparcarchive.computerhistory.org/Xerox_PARC_source_code.html Xerox PARC file system archive] - curated overview
 
** [https://xeroxparcarchive.computerhistory.org/Xerox_PARC_source_code.html Xerox PARC file system archive] - curated overview
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* [https://spectrum.ieee.org/xerox-parc Xerox PARC's Engineers on How They Invented The Future] - excellent [[IEEE]] article (with a few irritating minor errors: "information-processing techniques office" should be 'Information Processing Techniques Office' [its formal name]; "the 1,103 dynamic memory chips used in the MAXC design" - that's the [[Intel 1103]])
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* [https://spectrum.ieee.org/parc m]
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[[Category: Research Organizations]]
 
[[Category: Research Organizations]]
 
[[Category: Xerox]]
 
[[Category: Xerox]]

Revision as of 05:50, 3 October 2023

Xerox PARC was the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center; most usually referred to by the acronymmed short form. It most famously and consequentially produced the ground-breaking Xerox Alto personal workstation, from which essentially all modern computing user interfaces are descended; and the Ethernet local area network, which was similarly influential on the now-ubiquitous WiFi networking technology.

Also created at PARC was the PARC Universal Packet (PUP) internetworking protocol suite; it had a significant influence on the later TCP/IP.

The MAXC computers (clones of the PDP-10, which ran TENEX), were also produced there

Further reading

  • Michael A. Hiltzik, Dealers of Lightning: Xerox PARC and the Dawn of the Computer Age, HarperBusiness, New York, 1999
  • Douglas K. Smith, Robert C. Alexander, Fumbling the Future: How Xerox Invented, Then Ignored, the First Personal Computer, William Morrow, New York, 1988

External links