It reflects the original design and structure of early operating systems.
It reflects the original design and structure of early operating systems.
Hey everyone, let me clarify. The most widely used computers in the late 80s and early 90s were the Amiga, Mac, and certain Microsoft systems. Both the Amiga and Mac featured graphical user interfaces, and Wikipedia mentions Windows 1.0 was available as early as 1985. However, many MS-DOS machines ran solely on MS-DOS without a GUI, appearing like basic terminals. So, could it have been difficult to run programs in a graphical mode, forcing users to stick with DOS? Or were there other factors at play?
I understand your point. In the late 80s, the Amiga and Commodore were indeed prominent, yet many people likely associated them with terminals rather than the broader computing experience.
Macs and other systems primarily relied on command-line interfaces for interaction until graphical user interfaces became dominant. It wasn’t only DOS; companies like Commodore and Amiga weren’t necessarily the most popular in the United States during the mid to late 1980s. PC-compatible options probably held that position.