Genuine question.

I know they were the scrappy startup doing different cool things. But, what are the most major innovative things that they introduced, improved or just implemented that either revolutionized, improved or spurred change?

I am aware of the possibility of both fanboys and haters just duking it out below. But there’s always that one guy who has a fkn well-formatted paragraph of gold. I await that guy.

  • ripcord
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    121 year ago

    Other systems did have double-click, and app bundles (which I still think are just fantastic) were a NeXT thing. (which of course became Apple, but they weren’t at the time). But yeah, Apple way refined and brought those to a mass market.

    • @abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      app bundles (which I still think are just fantastic) were a NeXT thing.

      App bundles were just a better implementation of resource forks, which were invented by Apple and pre-dated NeXT.

      (which of course became Apple, but they weren’t at the time)

      NeXT was founded by people who worked at Apple (not just Steve) and they were largely put in charge when they came back to Apple. I wouldn’t call them separate companies. Just a weird moment in the history of the company. A lot like what just happened at OpenAI.

      • ripcord
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        21 year ago

        App bundles have virtually no relationship with resource forks. I guess you could say that App Bundles COULD include SOME metadata that you could have included in Forks, including the idea that something was an application or not. But that’s about it.

        On the NeXT always being Apple thing - I mean, some of it maybe was spiritually Apple, and eventually it was 100% Apple. But we’re splitting hairs.

        • @fubo@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          Eh, the difference between app bundles and resource forks isn’t the functionality itself, but rather how the filesystem interface cuts through the functionality.

          An OSX bundle is a Unix directory, whereas a classic Mac application is a file in a filesystem that supports multiple forks within a single file. Either way, you have typed objects (files or resources) that get carried around with a master object (the application).

    • @fubo@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      The first Mac came out in 1984; NeXT didn’t have a product until 1988.

      NeXT was later bought by Apple and their tech became the foundation of Mac OS X in 2001.

      But I was referring to the original '80s Macintosh System, not OS X. :)