Screenshots of Old Desktop OSes

(typewritten.org)

148 points | by adunk 4 hours ago

30 comments

  • bronlund 1 hour ago
    I can't help thinking about how much we have lost. Just finding the scrollbar nowadays can be a challenge. Not to mention if you want to resize a pane - in some applications they seem to have taken extra steps to make it difficult to find the line to grab.
  • jll29 1 hour ago
    My favorites:

    GEM + Ventura Publisher http://www.typewritten.org/Media/Images/ventura-publisher-1....

    Viewpoint http://www.typewritten.org/Media/Images/6085-viewpoint-2.0-p...

    AUX http://www.typewritten.org/Media/Images/aux-3.0.1.png

    It's suprising at first look that GEM tops my preferences but I recall having a very fond time on the Atari ST 520+. It had one of the best b/w monitors and TOS+GEM was orderly and uncluttered.

    Only preemptive multitasking and per-window menus were missing. As a plus, the OS was in ROM, so boot times were <1s.

  • jchw 2 hours ago
    Probably also worth dropping this here in the off chance someone here will be part of today's lucky 10,000. http://toastytech.com/guis/

    At first glance it looks like this is much more breadth over depth. Quite an array of systems here.

  • lynndotpy 2 hours ago
    I love this kind of thing :) I finally have a second site to bookmark alongside this similar collection: https://guidebookgallery.org/screenshots
    • keyle 59 minutes ago
      Irix 5 was so clean!
  • giamma 2 hours ago
    • walrus01 1 hour ago
      Or GS/OS for the Apple IIgs, the weird "not exactly Mac OS" GUI.
    • cout 1 hour ago
      There is the 16-bit Geoworks Ensemble (PC/GEOS), at least.
  • aidos 1 hour ago
    Alleycat in CGA just hit me hard.

    For the people that didn’t live through this time, lining these images up makes it obvious why those that did speak of how visually impressive the Amiga was.

  • arionmiles 25 minutes ago
    For anyone pining for innovation in Desktop, a small part of this culture is still alive in Ricing competitions.

    A recent favorite of mine is this one. Timestamp starts at the final submission being reviewed: https://youtu.be/DxEKF0cuEzc?si=mqE_2vpKDBsMWlKW&t=557

  • redbell 53 minutes ago
    I miss the old days. Thirty years ago, 64MB of RAM was considered a thing (http://www.typewritten.org/Media/Images/winnt-4.0-ppc-new.in...)
  • theletterf 33 minutes ago
    I love old desktop OSes so much I've created a Windows 3.1 theme for mine: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47909295
  • pedrogpimenta 1 hour ago
    This is like porn for me :)

    It's one of my favourite things, looking at and analyzing older interfaces. Some are lovely, some are cute, some are ugly, but most are... "naïve"? I love to think about the effort, the research, the trials and tribulations. I feel I will spend a great deal of time in this page!

    • repelsteeltje 49 minutes ago
      > [..] lovely [..] cute [..] ugly [..] naive...

      First and foremost to me those screenshots are somewhat disappointing as they can't match my memories. NeXT, BeOS, Irix, OpenLook, SunOS, Arthur (imagine the diversity)... they were SO awesomely impressive at insanely high multi-sync CRT resolution.

      Reality simply can't match the mind's eye, at least not for me.

  • sthuck 41 minutes ago
    I kinda miss that in the early 2000's kde and gnome shipped with a fuck ton of window decorations based on all those (then-not-so) old OS. Teenager me had fun switching them every day and playing with windowing behavior (focus follows mouse! hover to select and only one click needed!). I wonder what techy kids today do to explore and have fun.

    Speaking of the early 2000's, man, Aqua was such a good design. I appreciate the nextstep paradigm and design, but Aqua was just so futuristic, in a good way.

  • zargath 15 minutes ago
    great list, would be cool to see each OS evolving over time.

    NextStep/OSX was the only desktop OS that did not feel like a downgrade from Amiga Workbench

  • darkwater 1 hour ago
    Let's talk about the HP-9000 as depicted in http://www.typewritten.org/Media/Images/hpwindows-starbase-u...

    There is a `man` entry displayed in a terminal window there. The first Unix I've ever touched was HP-UX on an HP-9000 (server series, not the workstation one), and I have this memory that the underlined words you can see in that manpage as well were actually hyperlinks you can select and would bring you to the relevant section of the manpage that discussed that term. Am I fabricating that memory or is it real? I cannot find any info about it on the Internet.

    • jll29 1 hour ago
      I started with HP-UX 9.03 on a PA-RISC-powered 715-75 (to use Emacs, our whole research group logged into the 735 server to edit there, which was faster than running it locally).

      Any unclean pointer fiddling in C, and the process was terminated by the OS, so the machine was wonderful to use as a development box (especially with Purify installed) for software that would later be run on Windows or Linux.

      I eventually bought my own refurbished (and using academic discount) 715 (instead of a car), so I had the fastest machine in our student dorm of anyone I knew, undergrad, grad student or professor. I could just write my Master's thesis when everyone else kept re-installing Windows - the HP never crashed in 6.5 years, which has left me with deep respect for the old-schol (pre-Compaq) HP engineers. The machine (21" color CRT) occupied half of my 9 square metre dorm room, but it also kept me warm.

    • yread 1 hour ago
      I thought only `info` had hyperlinks
      • darkwater 1 hour ago
        In the GNU world, indeed. And that's why it makes even harder for me to remember exactly, it was 30 years ago, I was clueless and also Linux was already "big enough" to have some Red Hat installed in some x86 PC in the same lab.
    • aa-jv 1 hour ago
      My 'first Unix' was MIPS Risc/OS, and it had that feature too.
  • tomhow 2 hours ago
    Previously:

    Historical workstation desktop interface screenshots - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36191713 - June 2023 (55 comments)

    Retrotechnology – PC desktop screenshots from 1983-2005 - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15968745 - Dec 2017 (58 comments)

  • xnorswap 1 hour ago
    This leaves me kind of sad, that we've had such little innovation in desktop / window-managers for 30 years.

    Certainly it doesn't feel any easier to manage multiple windows than when we had a quarter of the screen space.

    • adrianwaj 24 minutes ago
      I am starting to think the top half of the screen should be the desktop, the bottom half should be the start menu but already activated and full of programs. No conventional bottom panel-bar with a start button. A right-most column should exist that fills up with a list of opened windows. [1]

      When I first saw Win95 with a cleared desktop, I immediately thought - where has everything gone? Why is this empty? Decades later I still think it's cumbersome to have to look and press at bottom left to see all the programs every time.

      [1] proportions and locations can be set

      Also, a "sweep" button that quickly clears the desktop into a "desktop archive." I do that manually anyway with my own "sweep" folders. Every few months I delete and categorize within the sweep folder. Keeping the desktop clean and organized is the new frontier, especially as screens become smaller and people don't want to lose flow.

      Verbose response, but what are your thoughts? Maybe use voice recognition that uses lip-reading through a camera to launch or modify?

      Mice and keyboards are just so passe, right, but I wouldn't go so far as getting a brain chip? Maybe a spherical "touchball" that senses the pressure of each finger to move a cursor? Trackballs are too laborsome. I have my mouse on maximum sensitivity and acceleration anyway.

  • yjftsjthsd-h 2 hours ago
    It's funny how early some things do and don't look familiar. A decent chunk of unix-family OSs have changed some since then, but also kinda not. CDE 1.0 looks almost exactly like the latest version:)
  • mananaysiempre 1 hour ago
    Where did the author get a copy of pre-X-integration NeWS, I wonder (if indeed they did). I haven’t been able to locate one online after a lot of determined searching, but I also can’t bring myself to declare that there isn’t one because the name is so ungoogleable.
  • logotype 30 minutes ago
    Deeply nostalgic! Thanks for sharing.
  • jeffreygoesto 2 hours ago
  • andsoitis 3 hours ago
    Year of release for each would be extra awesome.
  • inatreecrown2 1 hour ago
    What a wonderful resource! HP VUE has interesting color choices and a nice "Dock"
  • bsdooby 2 hours ago
    Even the site with its NeXTStep style (love it).
  • oniony 1 hour ago
    I love how little df has changed since 1985.
  • Terr_ 2 hours ago
    > DECWindows

    > /tmp/med_16.sixel

    ... Is that Sinfest? From before the author went weird? If so, then that's certainly a very different way of feeling old than I expected when clicking the link.

    P.S.: There's another in "RiscOS 3.71", and "System V Release 4 Amiga Version 1.1" references Penny Arcade. [0]

    [0] https://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2005/01/05/the-merch#

  • BoredPositron 55 minutes ago
    That brings back memories from pre press days and the SGI Indigo machines. They did some heavy lifting for the time.
  • livinglist 1 hour ago
    Sometime I wish time goes slower
  • grebc 2 hours ago
    Amazing resource!
  • barrenko 2 hours ago
    "We have learned nothing in 10,000 years."
    • grebc 2 hours ago
      Probably more accurately 40-45 years.
    • WalterGR 2 hours ago
      I don’t see any pie menus, so I’m leaning towards agreement...
      • mananaysiempre 2 hours ago
        Patents are very good at stifling progress and learning, even bogus ones.
  • vladsiu 1 hour ago
    [dead]