Article 6VWVE Revisiting Windows 1.0: how Microsoft’s first desktop gracefully failed

Revisiting Windows 1.0: how Microsoft’s first desktop gracefully failed

by
Sean Hollister
from The Verge on (#6VWVE)
Microsoft_Windows_1.0_page1-1.1419979021.jpeg?quality=90&strip=all&crop=0,0,100,100

Editoras note: Ahead of Microsoftas 50thas anniversary, weave fixed the layout on this story a which we originally published in 2012 when Windows 8 launched. Nowas a good time to revisit our look at an operating system that helped shape personal computing over the years.

Two years ago today, when Windows 1.0 celebrated its 25th birthday, we didnat yet know what the future of Windows would hold. Now that Windows 8 is on the market, the original is more relevant than ever before. Today, Windows 1.0 turns 27, and despite the many ways computing has changed since its debut, the two operating systems have some surprising similarities. Letas take a look at just how far weave come since Windows 1.0a and where Microsoft is retracing its own footsteps with the latest version of Windows.

On November 10th, 1983, Microsoft announced Windows. For $99, it came with a notepad, calendar, clock, cardfile, terminal application, file manager, a game of Reversi, Windows Write, and Windows Paint. The original press materials, prepared using Windows Write, had this quote from Bill Gates:

aWindows provides unprecedented power to users today and a foundation for hardware and soft …

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