...but my first GUI was Rogue.
What, no love for castle.exe?
Rogue is from 1980, so it's at least 4 years old than Castle Adventure and the Tandy 1000, both of which came out in 1984.
Rogue is actually older than the PC; it was ported to the PC from PDP 11 Unix 7th Edition. It's actually a bit older than 1980, but that's the date that wikipedia gives.
...but my first GUI was Rogue.
What, no love for castle.exe?
Rogue is from 1980, so it's at least 4 years old than Castle Adventure and the Tandy 1000, both of which came out in 1984.
Rogue is actually older than the PC; it was ported to the PC from PDP 11 Unix 7th Edition.
Even casual users find typing faster than mousing. So while there are modes of interaction where it’s nice to sit back and drive around with the mouse, we observe people staying more engaged and more focused on their task when they can keep their hands on the keyboard all the time. Hotkeys are a sort of mental gymnastics, the HUD is a continuation of mental flow.
It’s smart, because it can do things like fuzzy matching, and it can learn what you usually do so it can prioritise the things you use often. It covers the focused app (because that’s where you probably want to act) as well as system functionality; you can change IM state, or go offline in Skype, all through the HUD, without changing focus, because those apps all talk to the indicator system. When you’ve been using it for a little while it seems like it’s reading your mind, in a good way.
"OpenSimulator lacks support for many of the game-specific features of Second Life (on purpose), while pursuing innovative directions towards becoming the bare bones, but extensible, server of the 3D Web."
Sounds cool, but not for the purpose at hand.
(and: PDP-11 FTW -- I was part of one of the efforts mentioned in this Strange Birth article)
And to think I waited a few days before registering an account here.
Tell me about it; my thinking was the same "another site to register at?". But you still managed a 3 digit ID; I delayed a couple weeks I think, when IDs were introduced, and ended up at 4 digits.
"All the people are so happy now, their heads are caving in. I'm glad they are a snowman with protective rubber skin" -- They Might Be Giants