Explore the Windows Origin Story, from Bill Gates' 1983 Interface Manager announcement to the 1985 launch of Windows 1.0 as a graphical shell for MS-DOS.

Windows wasn't just a technical description; it was an invitation to look into a new world. It’s the origin story of the digital world we live in, and the drama behind how it evolved from a simple shell into a global powerhouse is even more intense than the software itself.
I want to understand windows








Before it became a household name, Bill Gates originally announced the project as Interface Manager in 1983. The name was later changed to Windows, which was considered a stroke of marketing genius. This shift moved the product away from a purely technical description to an invitation for users to look into a new visual world of computing rather than just typing cryptic commands into a black screen.
Windows 1.0 finally hit store shelves in November 1985, which was actually two years later than originally anticipated. At the time of its release, many in the industry viewed the project as a joke or a flashy gimmick because it was so ambitious and shaky. Despite the delays and skepticism, it marked a major milestone in Microsoft history by introducing a mouse-driven interface to the general public.
Unlike modern standalone operating systems, Windows 1.0 was essentially a graphical shell that sat on top of MS-DOS. While it allowed users to point at pictures and use a mouse, the old command-line system was still required to run the show behind the scenes. It represented a massive gamble by Bill Gates, betting that the future of computing would be visual rather than requiring users to memorize complex code.
Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
