Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 28th Oct 2007 16:55 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 281447
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GEOS on the Commodore 64 for example used a combination of raster display and sprites for the icons and mouse pointer.
Yeah, but GEOS came years and years after the Xerox Alto and Star machines (GEOS made its debut in 1986). So, GEOS "just" introduced a new method of drawing icons; they did not contribute to the "invention" of computer icons itself.
For the exact same reason, I do not mention the Lisa in the "invention" of the computer icon. The Lisa just copied the idea from Xerox (no pun intended); it did not invent it.
Edited 2007-10-28 19:28 UTC





Member since:
2005-11-10
What about Sprites? Icons also had history in sprites on early home computers, because for these machine there were such a limited number of characters per line and text could not easily be positioned anywhere that icons were often an important part of the interface.
GEOS on the Commodore 64 for example used a combination of raster display and sprites for the icons and mouse pointer.