Mac|Life

From icons to iconoclasm

How Apple changed the way computers look, feel, and work

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Apple didn’t invent the graphical user interface (GUI); that was the work of Doug Engelbart in the 1960s. Researcher­s at Xerox PARC built on his work and made the 1973 Alto, the first personal computer with a GUI. It had many of the things we take for granted today. That operating system spawned another, Gypsy, the first WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) interface. And it lead to the 1981 Xerox Star. A certain Steve Jobs was impressed by the PARC’s work as Apple made its own GUI, helped by many former PARC members.

The first GUI product Apple shipped was the Apple Lisa in 1983. Early versions of its operating system didn’t even have icons, but as Apple visited Xerox and occasional­ly poached its people, the design evolved. Apple took Xerox’s ideas and added their own, like drag and drop.

When Apple introduced the Apple Macintosh with its GUI in 1984, there was a mixed reception. Some tech pundits scoffed: who needs eye candy when word processing works just fine in plain text? But the GUI made computers so much more friendly, and it did for desktop publishing, digital art, and personal computing what the iPhone would later do for smartphone­s. When you used an app such as MacPaint, you saw the future.

EVOLUTION AND REVOLUTION

Apple’s System Software evolved through versions. Multitaski­ng arrived in 1987’s System Software 5’s MultiFinde­r, and the interface received an overhaul with System 7 in 1991. That introduced aliases, drag and drop into applicatio­ns, balloon help, and TrueType fonts. And on compatible Macs, it even ran in full color. But the biggest change happened in 2001 with the arrival of Mac OS X — a revolution.

The water–inspired Aqua interface of Mac OS X actually appeared first in 2000’s iMovie, however it was the liquid–looking OS that, according to Steve Jobs, you’d want to lick. The 2000 public beta was a beautiful thing, an operating system quite unlike anything you’d ever seen The design of OS X was so beautiful Steve Jobs described it as “lickable”.

before with a new place for your apps: the Dock.

Aqua used blue, white, and gray with little pops of color. You couldn’t really customize it beyond choosing the darker Graphite option, but Mac OS X was gorgeous.

The next big change was in Mac OS X Panther, which applied Brushed Metal to the Finder, and Mac OS X Leopard, which applied it system– wide. But the biggest earthquake in Mac interface design wasn’t until 2020. That’s when Big Sur made macOS look more like iOS than ever before with its unified design, something that’s undoubtedl­y prettier but disappoint­ed some long–term Mac users.

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