NeXT: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Next-logo.jpg|200px|right]] | [[Image:Next-logo.jpg|200px|right]] | ||
A company founded by Steve Jobs in | A company founded by Steve Jobs in 1985 to manufacture workstation computers specifically designed for the educational market that were based around Motorola 68030 microprocessors. The workstations were a notorious flop and were taken off the market in 1993 but the microkernel based operating system called '''NeXTStep''' continued to be developed. '''OPENSTEP''' was later used as the basis for [[Mac OSX]]. | ||
==Products== | |||
===Workstations=== | |||
*NeXT Cube | |||
===Operating Environments=== | |||
====NeXTStep==== | ====NeXTStep==== | ||
Th NeXTStep operating system was designed by a team led by Avie Tevanian, but he had been a member of the team that designed the Mach Microkernel at the Carnegie Mellon University alongside the BSD [[UNIX]] like personality for it. NeXTStep is basically a version of the Mach kernel and the UNIX personality with a layer of [[object-oriented]] user interface on top, that is implemented in [[Objective C]]. | Th NeXTStep operating system was designed by a team led by Avie Tevanian, but he had been a member of the team that designed the Mach Microkernel at the Carnegie Mellon University alongside the BSD [[UNIX]] like personality for it. NeXTStep is basically a version of the Mach kernel and the UNIX personality with a layer of [[object-oriented]] user interface on top, that is implemented in [[Objective C]]. | ||
====OPENSTEP==== | |||
'''OPENSTEP''' was later used as the basis for MacOS X Server and [[MacOS X]]. | |||
===Software Development Tools=== | |||
==Links== | |||
[[Category:Companies]][[Category:Hardware platforms]][[Category:Operating Systems]] | [[Category:Companies]][[Category:Hardware platforms]][[Category:Operating Systems]] |
Revision as of 01:21, 25 March 2016

A company founded by Steve Jobs in 1985 to manufacture workstation computers specifically designed for the educational market that were based around Motorola 68030 microprocessors. The workstations were a notorious flop and were taken off the market in 1993 but the microkernel based operating system called NeXTStep continued to be developed. OPENSTEP was later used as the basis for Mac OSX.
Products
Workstations
- NeXT Cube
Operating Environments
NeXTStep
Th NeXTStep operating system was designed by a team led by Avie Tevanian, but he had been a member of the team that designed the Mach Microkernel at the Carnegie Mellon University alongside the BSD UNIX like personality for it. NeXTStep is basically a version of the Mach kernel and the UNIX personality with a layer of object-oriented user interface on top, that is implemented in Objective C.
OPENSTEP
OPENSTEP was later used as the basis for MacOS X Server and MacOS X.