Graphical user interface

from WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
graphical user interface
    n 1: a user interface based on graphics (icons and pictures and
         menus) instead of text; uses a mouse as well as a keyboard
         as an input device [syn: {graphical user interface}, {GUI}]
    
from The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
Graphical User Interface
GUI

   <operating system> (GUI) The use of pictures rather than just
   words to represent the input and output of a program.  A
   program with a GUI runs under some {windowing system}
   (e.g. The {X Window System}, {MacOS}, {Microsoft Windows},
   {Acorn} {RISC OS}, {NEXTSTEP}).  The program displays certain
   {icons}, {buttons}, {dialogue boxes}, etc. in its {windows} on
   the screen and the user controls it mainly by moving a
   {pointer} on the screen (typically controlled by a {mouse})
   and selecting certain objects by pressing buttons on the mouse
   while the pointer is pointing at them.  This contrasts with a
   {command line interface} where communication is by exchange of
   strings of text.

   Windowing systems started with the first {real}-time graphic
   display systems for computers, namely the {SAGE} Project
   [Dates?] and {Ivan Sutherland}'s {Sketchpad} (1963).  {Douglas
   Engelbart}'s {Augmentation of Human Intellect} project at
   {SRI} in the 1960s developed the {On-Line System}, which
   incorporated a mouse-driven cursor and multiple windows.
   Several people from Engelbart's project went to Xerox PARC in
   the early 1970s, most importantly his senior engineer, {Bill
   English}.  The Xerox PARC team established the {WIMP} concept,
   which appeared commercially in the {Xerox 8010} (Star) system
   in 1981.

   Beginning in 1980(?), led by {Jef Raskin}, the {Macintosh}
   team at {Apple Computer} (which included former members of the
   Xerox PARC group) continued to develop such ideas in the first
   commercially successful product to use a GUI, the Apple
   Macintosh, released in January 1984.  In 2001 Apple introduced
   {Mac OS X}.

   {Microsoft} modeled the first version of {Windows}, released
   in 1985, on Mac OS.  Windows was a GUI for {MS-DOS} that had
   been shipped with {IBM PC} and compatible computers since
   1981.  Apple sued Microsoft over infringement of the
   look-and-feel of the MacOS.  The court case ran for many
   years.

   [Wikipedia].

   (2002-03-25)
    

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