Difference between revisions of "Xerox Alto"

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Xerox attempted to commercialize the lessons of the Alto, in the [[Xerox Star]], but it was not a commercial success. Other companies, including [[IBM]] ([[hardware]]), [[Microsoft]] ([[software]]) and [[Apple]] (both) did manage to produce succesful products along the lines pioneered by the Alto.
 
Xerox attempted to commercialize the lessons of the Alto, in the [[Xerox Star]], but it was not a commercial success. Other companies, including [[IBM]] ([[hardware]]), [[Microsoft]] ([[software]]) and [[Apple]] (both) did manage to produce succesful products along the lines pioneered by the Alto.
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==External links==
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* [https://xeroxalto.computerhistory.org/xerox_alto_file_system_archive.html Xerox Alto file system archive]
  
 
[[Category: Workstations]]
 
[[Category: Workstations]]

Revision as of 14:53, 20 October 2021

The Alto, built by Xerox' Xerox PARC laboratory, was a ground-breaking and extremely influential personal computer - in fact, all contemporary personal computers are descendants of the Alto.

The Alto was novel in that each machine had a bit-mapped display, allowing the creation of a graphical user interface, and was also attached to a high-speed network, the Ethernet, also invented at PARC. In addition to the keyboard, users could use a mouse to interact with applications.

The CPU was microcoded, built out of TTL, and could emulate several different CPUs - the basic ROM more or less emulated a Data General Nova. The CPU did not support DMA; rather, it had provision for up to 16 micro-tasks, which did all bulk input/output.

Altos all had a 1.25Mbyte disk drive from Diablo Systems (the same drive as in the RK02 disk drive); Alto-based file servers used Trident disk drives.

Xerox attempted to commercialize the lessons of the Alto, in the Xerox Star, but it was not a commercial success. Other companies, including IBM (hardware), Microsoft (software) and Apple (both) did manage to produce succesful products along the lines pioneered by the Alto.

External links