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Multisim was originally called Electronics Workbench [6] and created by a company called Interactive Image Technologies. [7] At the time it was mainly used as an educational tool to teach electronics technician and electronics engineering programs in colleges and universities .
The home screen on a PalmPilot Professional. One of the first examples of a home screen can be found on the PalmPilot, which debuted in 1997. [5] Early home screens were often less customizable than current iterations. For example, early versions of iOS did not allow users to rearrange applications on the home screen or change the background ...
Workbench 2.0 also added support for public screens. Instead of the Workbench screen being the only shareable screen, applications could create their own named screens to share with other applications. Workbench 2.0 included and integrated ARexx, allowing users to control the system and other programs from user scripts.
Each screen may have a different video resolution or color depth. AmigaOS 2.0 added support for public screens, allowing applications to open windows on other applications' screens. Prior to AmigaOS 2.0, only the Workbench screen was shared. [11] A widget in the top-right corner of every screen allows screens to be cycled through.
HP Compaq Elite 8000 small form factor desktop. HP Inc. targets their line of business desktop computers for use in the corporate, government, and education markets. HP operate their business desktops on minimum 12-month product cycle.
All 32-bit editions of Windows 10, including Home and Pro, support up to 4 GB. [292] 64-bit editions of Windows 10 Education and Pro support up to 2 TB, 64-bit editions of Windows 10 Pro for Workstations and Enterprise support up to 6 TB, while the 64-bit edition of Windows 10 Home is limited to 128 GB. [292]
After 1994, Commodore's demise left Amiga to an uncertain future. Windows-based PCs became the standard in the home and the office. Many software houses either left the Amiga market or ran into financial troubles. In 1996, Aminet was created. Aminet was the first centralized Internet repository of all Amiga public domain software and documents.
Intuition is the native windowing system and user interface (UI) engine of AmigaOS.It was developed almost entirely by RJ Mical. [1] [2] Intuition should not be confused with Workbench, the AmigaOS desktop environment [3] and spatial file manager, which relies on Intuition for handling windows and input events.