• DocumentCode
    1399157
  • Title

    Mitigating Microsoft with virtual consoles

  • Author

    Holmes, Neville

  • Author_Institution
    Tasmania Univ., Hobart, Tas., Australia
  • Volume
    31
  • Issue
    7
  • fYear
    1998
  • fDate
    7/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    105
  • Abstract
    The most striking aspect of computing in the 1990s, or at least the late 1990s, is the almost universal acceptance of windows as a way users interact with software. Users get a strong feeling of control, even exhilaration, in having several windows in production at once and being able to choose among them. Before windowing took over, the console, the display terminal together with the keyboard, was implemented primarily in hardware. Now that hardware is so much more capable than it used to be, it could run multiple virtual consoles just as easily as it used to run single consoles. The author discusses Microsoft´s strength, virtual consoles in hardware and XML (Extensible Markup Language)
  • Keywords
    DP industry; graphical user interfaces; operating systems (computers); page description languages; remote consoles; Extensible Markup Language; Microsoft; XML; display terminal; keyboard; virtual consoles; windows; Cascading style sheets; Displays; HTML; Hardware; Heart; Keyboards; Markup languages; Natural languages; Page description languages; Production; Proposals; Publishing; SGML; XML;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Computer
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9162
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/2.689683
  • Filename
    689683