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Guy Harris (talk | contribs) →Microcomputers: Remove comment about macOS that is not relevant to the rest of the sentence, which is discussing Macs from long before Mac OS X/OS X/macOS as being the first personal computers with a GUI. (It'd be more relevant in the final sentence, which discusses UN*Xes, but it's also a bit incomplete and potentially misleading - in what way does having *some* FreeBSD code make it "UNIX-based"?) |
Guy Harris (talk | contribs) →Microcomputers: Jobs was not the sole member of the Macintosh project. |
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The invention of [[large scale integration]] enabled the production of [[personal computer]]s (initially called [[microcomputer]]s) from around 1980.{{sfn|Tanenbaum|Bos|2023|pp=15–16}} For around five years, the [[CP/M]] (Control Program for Microcomputers) was the most popular operating system for microcomputers.{{sfn|Tanenbaum|Bos|2023|p=16}} Later, IBM bought the [[DOS]] (Disk Operating System) from [[Microsoft]]. After modifications requested by IBM, the resulting system was called [[MS-DOS]] (MicroSoft Disk Operating System) and was widely used on IBM microcomputers. Later versions increased their sophistication, in part by borrowing features from UNIX.{{sfn|Tanenbaum|Bos|2023|p=16}}
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On mobile devices, [[Symbian OS]] was dominant at first, being usurped by [[BlackBerry OS]] (introduced 2002) and [[iOS]] for [[iPhone]]s (from 2007). Later on, the open-source, UNIX-based [[Android (operating system)|Android]] (introduced 2008) became most popular.{{sfn|Tanenbaum|Bos|2023|pp=19–20}}
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