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Xerox Alto

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Xerox Alto
The Alto has a keyboard, mouse, and portrait-oriented monitor.
DeveloperXerox PARC
ManufacturerXerox PARC
Release dateMarch 1, 1973; 51 years ago (1973-03-01)
Introductory priceUS$32,000 (equivalent to $134,000 in 2023)[1]
Units shippedAlto I: 120
Alto II: 2,000[2]
Media2.5 MB one-platter disk cartridge[3]
Operating systemAlto Executive (Exec)
CPUTTL-based, with the ALU built around four 74181 MSI chips. It has user programmable microcode, uses big-endian format and a CPU clock of 5.88 MHz.[4][3]
Memory96[5] – 512 KB (128 KB for $4000)[3]
Display606 × 808 pixels[3]
InputKeyboard, 3-button mouse, 5-key chorded keyboard
ConnectivityEthernet
SuccessorXerox Star
RelatedETH Lilith;
Lisa;
Apollo/Domain

The Xerox Alto is a computer system developed at Xerox PARC (Palo Alto Research Center) in the 1970s. It is considered one of the first workstations or personal computers, and its development pioneered many aspects of modern computing. It features a graphical user interface (GUI), a mouse, Ethernet networking, and the ability to run multiple applications simultaneously. It is one of the first computers to use a WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) text editor and has a bit-mapped display. The Alto did not succeed commercially, but it had a significant influence on the development of future computer systems.

The Alto was designed for an operating system based on a GUI, later using the desktop metaphor.[6][7] The first machines were introduced on March 1, 1973,[8] and in limited production starting one decade before Xerox's designs inspired Apple to release the first mass-market GUI computers. The Alto is contained in a relatively small cabinet and uses a custom central processing unit (CPU) built from multiple SSI and MSI integrated circuits. Each machine cost tens of thousands of dollars. Few were built initially, but by the late 1970s, about 1,000 were in use at various Xerox laboratories, and about another 500 in several universities. Total production was about 2,000 systems.

The Alto became well known in Silicon Valley and its GUI was increasingly seen as the future of computing. In 1979, Steve Jobs arranged a visit to Xerox PARC, during which Apple Computer personnel received demonstrations of Xerox technology in exchange for Xerox being able to purchase stock options in Apple.[9] After two visits to see the Alto, Apple engineers used the concepts in developing the Lisa and Macintosh systems.

In 1981, Xerox commercialized a line of office computers, the Star, based on concepts from the Alto. A complete office system including several workstations, storage, and a laser printer cost up to $100,000 (equivalent to $335,000 in 2023). Like the Alto, the Star had little direct impact on the market.

History

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Alto mouse
The top three buttons
The underside has three rolling balls.
The Alto keyset is a chorded keyboard that never became popular.

The Alto is the first computer with a graphical operating system, and was built on earlier graphical interface designs. It was conceived in 1972 in a memo written by Butler Lampson, inspired by the oN-Line System (NLS) developed by Douglas Engelbart and Dustin Lindberg at SRI International (SRI). Of further influence was the PLATO education system developed at the Computer-based Education Research Laboratory at the University of Illinois.[10] The Alto was designed mostly by Charles P. Thacker. Industrial Design and manufacturing was sub-contracted to Xerox's Special Programs Group in El Segundo, whose team included program manager Doug Stewart, operations manager Abbey Silverstone, and industrial designer Bob Nishimura. An initial run of 30 units was produced by the Special Programs Group, working with John Ellenby at PARC and Stewart and Silverstone at El Segundo, who were responsible for re-designing the Alto's electronics. Due to the success of the pilot run, the team went on to produce approximately 2,000 units over the next ten years.[11]

Several Xerox Alto chassis are now on display at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California, one is on display at the Computer Museum of America in Roswell, Georgia, and several are in private hands. Running systems are on display at the System Source Computer Museum in Hunt Valley, Maryland. Charles P. Thacker was awarded the 2009 Turing Award of the Association for Computing Machinery on March 9, 2010, for his pioneering design and realization of the Alto.[12] The 2004 Charles Stark Draper Prize was awarded to Thacker, Alan C. Kay, Butler Lampson, and Robert W. Taylor for their work on Alto.[13]

On October 21, 2014, Xerox Alto's source code and other resources were released from the Computer History Museum.[14]

Architecture

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The following description is based mostly on the August 1976 Alto Hardware Manual by Xerox PARC.[15]

Alto uses a microcoded design, but unlike many computers, the microcode engine is not hidden from the programmer in a layered design. Applications such as Pinball take advantage of this to accelerate performance. The Alto has a bit-slice arithmetic logic unit (ALU) based on the Texas Instruments 74181 chip, a ROM control store with a writable control store extension and has 128 (expandable to 512) KB of main memory organized in 16-bit words. Mass storage is provided by a hard disk drive that uses a removable 2.5 MB one-platter cartridge (Diablo Systems, a company Xerox later bought) similar to those used by the IBM 2310. The base machine and one disk drive are housed in a cabinet about the size of a small refrigerator; one more disk drive can be added via daisy-chaining.

Alto both blurs and ignores the distinction between functional elements. Rather than a distinct central processing unit with a well-defined electrical interface (such as a system bus) to storage and peripherals, the Alto ALU interacts directly with hardware interfaces to memory and peripherals, driven by microinstructions that are output from the control store. The microcode machine supports up to 16 cooperative multitasking tasks, each with fixed priority. The emulator task executes the normal instruction set to which most applications are written; that instruction set is similar to a Data General Nova.[16] Other tasks serve the display, memory refresh, disk, network, and other I/O functions. For example, the bitmap display controller is little more than a 16-bit shift register; microcode moves display refresh data from main memory to the shift register, which serializes it into a display of pixels corresponding to the ones and zeros of the memory data. Ethernet is likewise supported by minimal hardware, with a shift register that acts bidirectionally to serialize output words and deserialize input words. Its speed was designed to be 3 Mbit/s because the microcode engine can not go faster and continue to support the video display, disk activity, and memory refresh.

Unlike most minicomputers of the era, Alto does not support a serial terminal for user interface. Apart from an Ethernet connection, the Alto's only common output device is a bi-level (black and white) cathode-ray tube (CRT) display with a tilt-and-swivel base, mounted in portrait orientation rather than the more common "landscape" orientation. Its input devices are a custom detachable keyboard, a three-button mouse, and an optional 5-key chorded keyboard (chord keyset). The last two items had been introduced by SRI's On-Line System and the mouse was an instant success among Alto users, but the chord keyset never became popular.

In the early mice, the buttons are three narrow bars, arranged top to bottom rather than side to side; they were named after their colors in the documentation. The motion is sensed by two perpendicular wheels. These were soon replaced with a ball-type mouse, which was invented by Ronald E. Rider and developed by Bill English. These are photo-mechanical mice, first using white light, and then infrared (IR), to count the rotations of wheels inside the mouse.

Each key on the Alto keyboard is represented as a separate bit in a set of memory locations. As a result, it is possible to read multiple key presses concurrently. This trait can be used to alter from where on the disk the Alto boots. The keyboard value is used as the sector address on the disk to boot from, and by holding specific keys down while pressing the boot button, different microcode and operating systems can be loaded. This gave rise to the expression "nose boot" where the keys needed to boot for a test OS release requires more fingers than the user can articulate. Nose boots were obsoleted by the move2keys program that shifts files on the disk so that a specified key sequence can be used.

Several other I/O devices were developed for the Alto, including a television camera, the Hy-Type daisywheel printer and a parallel port, although these were quite rare. The Alto could also control external disk drives to act as a file server. This was a common application for the machine.

Software

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Neptune is the Alto's file manager program.

Early software for the Alto was written in the programming language BCPL, and later in Mesa,[1] which was not widely used outside PARC but influenced several later languages, such as Modula. The Alto used an early version of ASCII which lacked the underscore character, instead having the left-arrow character used in ALGOL 60 and many derivatives for the assignment operator: this peculiarity may have been the source of the CamelCase style for compound identifiers. Altos were also microcode-programmable by users.[15]

The Alto helped popularize the use of raster graphics model for all output, including text and graphics. It also introduced the concept of the bit block transfer operation (bit blit, BitBLT), as the fundamental programming interface to the display. Despite its small memory size, many innovative programs were written for the Alto, including:

There was no spreadsheet or database software. The first electronic spreadsheet program, VisiCalc, did not appear until 1979.

Diffusion and evolution

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Technically, the Alto is a small minicomputer, but it could be considered a personal computer in the sense that it is used by one person sitting at a desk, in contrast with the mainframe computers and other minicomputers of the era. It is arguably "the first personal computer", although this title is disputed. More significantly (and perhaps less controversially), it may be considered to be one of the first workstation systems, with successors such as the Apollo workstations and systems by Symbolics (designed to natively run Lisp as a development environment).[21]

In 1976 to 1977, the Swiss computer pioneer Niklaus Wirth spent a sabbatical at PARC and was excited by the Alto. Unable to bring back an Alto system to Europe, Wirth decided to build a new system from scratch and he designed with his group the Lilith.[22] It was ready to use around 1980, before Apple released Lisa in 1981 and Macintosh in 1984. Around 1985, Wirth started a complete redesign of the Lilith under the Name "Project Oberon".

In 1978, Xerox donated 50 Altos to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, Carnegie Mellon University,[1] and the University of Rochester.[23] The National Bureau of Standards's Institute for Computer Sciences in Gaithersburg, Maryland received one Alto in late 1978 along with Xerox Interim File System (IFS) file servers and Dover laser printers. These machines inspired the ETH Zuerich Lilith and Three Rivers Company PERQ workstations, and the Stanford University Network (SUN) workstation, which launched a spin-off company, Sun Microsystems. The Apollo/Domain workstation was heavily influenced by the Alto.

Following the acquisition of an Alto, the White House information systems department sought to lead federal computer suppliers in its direction. The Executive Office of the President of the United States (EOP) issued a request for proposal for a computer system to replace the aging Office of Management and Budget (OMB) budget system, using Alto-like workstations, connected to an IBM-compatible mainframe. The request was eventually withdrawn because no mainframe producer could supply such a configuration.

In December 1979, Apple Computer's co-founder Steve Jobs visited Xerox PARC, where he was shown the Smalltalk-76 object-oriented programming environment, networking, and most importantly the WYSIWYG, mouse-driven graphical user interface provided by the Alto. At the time, he didn't recognize the significance of the first two, but was excited by the last one. The GUI was promptly integrating into Apple's products, first into the Lisa and then in the Macintosh, and Jobs recruited several key researchers from PARC.[24]

In 1980-1981, Altos were used by engineers at PARC and at the Xerox System Development Department to design the Star workstations.

Xerox and the Alto

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Xerox was slow to realize the value of the technology that had been developed at PARC.[25] The Xerox corporate acquisition of Scientific Data Systems (SDS, later XDS) in the late 1960s had no interest to PARC. PARC built their own emulation of the Digital Equipment Corporation PDP-10 named the MAXC.[26] The MAXC was PARC's gateway machine to the ARPANET. The firm was reluctant to get into the computer business again with commercially untested designs, although many of the philosophies would ship in later products.

Byte magazine stated in 1981,[1]

It is unlikely that a person outside of the computer-science research community will ever be able to buy an Alto. They are not intended for commercial sale, but rather as development tools for Xerox, and so will not be mass-produced. What makes them worthy of mention is the fact that a large number of the personal computers of tomorrow will be designed with knowledge gained from the development of the Alto.

After the Alto, PARC developed more powerful workstations (none intended as projects[clarification needed]) informally termed "the D-machines": Dandelion (least powerful, but the only to be made a product in one form), Dolphin; Dorado (most powerful; an emitter-coupled logic (ECL) machine); and hybrids like the Dandel-Iris.

Before the advent of personal computers such as the Apple II in 1977 and the IBM Personal Computer (IBM PC) in 1981, the computer market was dominated by costly mainframes and minicomputers equipped with dumb terminals that time-shared the processing time of the central computer. Through the 1970s, Xerox showed no interest in PARC's work. When Xerox finally entered the PC market with the Xerox 820, it pointedly rejected the Alto design and opted instead for a very conventional model, a CP/M-based machine with the then-standard 80 by 24 character-only monitor and no mouse.

With the help of PARC researchers, Xerox eventually developed the Star, based on the Dandelion workstation, and later the cost-reduced Star, the 6085 office system, based on the Daybreak workstation. These machines, based on the Wildflower architecture described in a paper by Butler Lampson, incorporated most of the Alto innovations, including the graphical user interface with icons, windows, folders, Ethernet-based local networking, and network-based laser printer services.

Xerox only realized its mistake in the early 1980s, after the Macintosh revolutionized the PC market via its bitmap display and the mouse-centered interface. Both of these were inspired by the Alto.[25] The Xerox Star series was a relative commercial success, but it came too late. The expensive Xerox workstations could not compete against the cheaper GUI-based workstations that arose in the wake of the first Macintosh, and Xerox eventually quit the workstation market.

See also

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Xerox Alto
1973–1975 (Alto I)[27]


1975–1981 (Alto II)

Succeeded by

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Wadlow, Thomas A. (September 1981). "The Xerox Alto Computer". Byte. Vol. 6, no. 9. p. 58. Retrieved October 19, 2013.
  2. ^ "MP3 Audio of Ron Cude talking about the 1979 Boca Raton Alto Event". The DigiBarn Computer Museum. 2003. Archived from the original on September 18, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d "History of Computers and Computing, Birth of the modern computer, Personal computer, Xerox Alto". Archived from the original on December 5, 2020. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
  4. ^ "Alto I Schematics" (PDF). Bitsavers. p. 54. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 24, 2021. Retrieved July 21, 2016.
  5. ^ Alto Operating System Reference Manual (PDF). Xerox PARC. June 26, 1975. p. 2. Archived (PDF) from the original on July 17, 2019. Retrieved July 21, 2016.
  6. ^ Koved, Larry; Selker, Ted (1999). "Room with a view (RWAV): A metaphor for interactive computing" ( PDF). IBM TJ Watson Research Center. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.22.1340.
  7. ^ Thacker, Charles P.; McCreight, Ed; Lampson, Butler; Sproull, Robert; Boggs, David (September 1981). "Alto: A personal computer". In Siewiorek, Daniel P.; Bell, C. Gordon; Newell, Allen (eds.). Computer Structures: Principles and Examples (2nd ed.). McGraw-Hill. pp. 549–572. ISBN 978-0-07-057302-4.
  8. ^ "The Xerox Alto". Nathan's Toasty Technology page. Archived from the original on July 4, 2021. Retrieved April 28, 2021.
  9. ^ "The Xerox PARC Visit". web.stanford.edu. Archived from the original on September 24, 2021. Retrieved September 2, 2018.
  10. ^ Dear, Brian (2017). The Friendly Orange Glow: The untold story of the PLATO System and the dawn of cyberculture. Pantheon Books. pp. 186–187. ISBN 978-1-101-87155-3.
  11. ^ Clement, Carl J. (March 2002). "The History of the Xerox Alto" (PDF). The Alto From The Industrial Designer's Perspective.
  12. ^ Gold, Virginia (2010). "ACM Turing Award Goes to Creator of First Modern Personal Computer". Association for Computing Machinery. Archived from the original on March 11, 2010. Retrieved January 11, 2011.
  13. ^ ""2004 Recipients of the Charles Stark Draper Prize"". Archived from the original on November 5, 2010. Retrieved November 15, 2011.
  14. ^ McJones, Paul (October 21, 2014). "Xerox Alto Source Code - The roots of the modern personal computer". Software Gems: The Computer History Museum Historical Source Code Series. Computer History Museum. Archived from the original on January 2, 2015. Retrieved January 8, 2015. With the permission of the Palo Alto Research Center, the Computer History Museum is pleased to make available, for non-commercial use only, snapshots of Alto source code, executables, documentation, font files, and other files from 1975 to 1987.
  15. ^ a b "Alto Hardware Manual" (PDF). bitsavers.org. Xerox. Archived (PDF) from the original on September 4, 2017. Retrieved July 17, 2019.
  16. ^ Thacker, Charles P.; McCreight, Edward M. (December 1974). Alto: A Personal Computer System (PDF) (Report). p. 13. Archived (PDF) from the original on August 14, 2011. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  17. ^ Brotz, Douglas K. (May 1981). "Laurel Manual" (PDF). Xerox. Archived (PDF) from the original on August 23, 2019. Retrieved August 23, 2019.
  18. ^ Ollig, Mark (October 31, 2011). "They could have owned the computer industry". Herald Journal. Archived from the original on February 27, 2021. Retrieved February 26, 2021.
  19. ^ "Xerox Star". The History of Computing Project. Archived from the original on February 1, 2020. Retrieved August 23, 2019.
  20. ^ D.G. Fairbairn; J.A. Rowson. ICARUS: An Interactive Integrated Circuit Layout Program. 15th Design Automation Conference. Las Vegas, NV, USA. doi:10.1109/DAC.1978.1585168.
  21. ^ "Personal Computer Milestones". Blinkenlights Archaeological Institute. Archived from the original on August 2, 2021. Retrieved December 31, 2006.
  22. ^ "Lilith Workstation". Archived from the original on March 3, 2017. Retrieved January 3, 2017.
  23. ^ Denber, Michel (February 1982). "Altos Gamesmen". Byte (letter). Vol. 7, no. 2. p. 28. Retrieved October 19, 2013.
  24. ^ "PBS Triumph of the Nerds Television Program Transcripts: Part III". PBS (Public Broadcasting System). Archived from the original on December 16, 2017. Retrieved February 8, 2007.
  25. ^ a b Smith, Douglas K.; Alexander, Robert C. (1988). Fumbling the Future: How Xerox Invented, Then Ignored, the First Personal Computer. New York: William Morrow. ISBN 978-0688069599.
  26. ^ Fiala, Edward R. (May 1978). "The Maxc Systems". Computer. Vol. 11, no. 5. pp. 57–67. doi:10.1109/C-M.1978.218184. S2CID 16813696. Archived from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  27. ^ Tomitsch, Martin (January 2003). "Trends and Evolution of Window Interfaces" (PDF). Retrieved March 3, 2023.

Further reading

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