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Xerox Star

Xerox Star
Xerox Star 8010.jpg
Xerox Star 8010
Also known as Xerox 8010 Information System
Developer Xerox
Manufacturer Xerox
Product family 8000-series
Type Workstation
Release date 1981; 36 years ago (1981)
Introductory price $16,500 (equivalent to $43,467 in 2016)
Discontinued 1985
Operating system Pilot
CPU AMD Am2900 based
Memory 384 KiB, expandable to 1.5 MiB
Storage 10, 29, or 40 MB hard drive and 8" floppy drive
Display 17 inch
Graphics 1024×800 pixels @ 38.7 Hz
Connectivity Ethernet
Successor ViewPoint (Xerox 6085)

The Star workstation, officially named Xerox 8010 Information System, was the first commercial system to incorporate various technologies that have since become standard in personal computers, including a bitmapped display, a window-based graphical user interface, icons, folders, mouse (two-button), Ethernet networking, file servers, print servers, and e-mail.

Introduced by Xerox Corporation in 1981, the name Star technically refers only to the software sold with the system for the office automation market. The 8010 workstations were also sold with software based on the programming languages Lisp and Smalltalk, for the smaller research and software development market.

The Xerox Star systems concept owes much to the Xerox Alto, an experimental workstation designed by the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). The first Alto became operational in 1972. At first, only few Altos were built. Although by 1979 nearly 1,000 Ethernet-linked Altos were in use at Xerox and another 500 at collaborating universities and government offices, it was never intended to be a commercial product. While Xerox had started in 1977 a development project which worked to incorporate those innovations into a commercial product, their concept was an integrated document preparation system, centered around the (then expensive) laser printing technology and oriented towards large corporations and their trading partners. When that system was announced in 1981, the cost was about $75,000 ($198,000 in today's dollars) for a basic system, and $16,000 ($42,000 today) for each added workstation.


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