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NeXTSTEP
 

Information About

Nextstep




  Screenshot
  Caption Nextstep Graphical User Interface
  Developer NeXT
  Family Unix-like
  Version Number Varies
  Source Model Proprietary Software / Closed Source
  Latest Release Version 33
  Latest Release Date 1995
  Kernel Type Hybrid Kernel
  Ui
  License Proprietary EULA
  Working State Historic
  Website


Nextstep was the original Object-oriented , Multitasking Operating System that NeXT Computer developed to run on its proprietary NeXT computers ("black boxes"). Nextstep 1.0 was released on September 18 , 1989 after several previews starting in 1986 . The last version, 3.3, was released in early 1995 , by which time it ran not only on Motorola 68000 Family processors, but also IBM PC Compatible X86 , Sun SPARC , and HP PA-RISC .


DESCRIPTION


Nextstep was a combination of several parts:

The key to Nextstep's fame were the last three items. The toolkits offered incredible power, and were used to build all of the software on the machine. Distinctive features of the Objective-C language made the writing of applications with Nextstep far easier than on many competing systems, and the system was often pointed to as a paragon of computer development, even a decade later.

Nextstep's user interface was refined and consistent, and introduced the idea of the , real-time scrolling and window dragging, properties dialog boxes ("inspectors"), window modification notices (such as the saved status of a file), etc. The system was among the first general-purpose user interfaces to handle publishing color standards, transparency, sophisticated sound and music processing (through a Motorola 56000 DSP ), advanced graphics primitives, internationalization, and modern typography in a consistent manner across all applications.

Additional kits were added to the product line to make the system more attractive. This included Portable Distributed Objects (PDO), which allowed easy Remote Invocation , and Enterprise Objects Framework , a powerful Object-relational Database system. These kits made the system particularly interesting to custom application programmers, and Nextstep had a long history in the Financial Programming community.


NAMING


The name was officially capitalized in many different ways, initially being NextStep, then NeXTstep, then NeXTSTEP, and became NEXTSTEP (all capitals) only at the end of its life. The capitalization most commonly used by "insiders" is ''NeXTstep''. The confusion continued after the release of the OpenStep standard, when NeXT released what was effectively an OpenStep-compliant version of Nextstep with the name Openstep.


INFLUENCE


The first , the modern "Notebook" interface for Mathematica , and the advanced spreadsheet Lotus Improv .

About the time of the 3.2 release NeXT teamed up with Sun Microsystems to develop OpenStep , a cross-platform standard and implementation (for Sun Solaris, Microsoft Windows, and NeXT's version of the Mach kernel) based on Nextstep 3.2. Following an announcement on December 20 , 1996 ,1 on February 4 , 1997 , Apple Computer acquired NeXT for $427 million, and used the OpenStep operating system as the basis for Mac OS X .2

A Free Software implementation of the OpenStep standard, GNUstep , also exists.


VERSIONS


Versions up to 4.2 were published, the last version 4.2 after purchase of NeXT by Apple


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