| dbo:description
|
- entreprise (fr)
- شركة (ar)
- impresa (it)
- defunct 1990s corporation (en)
- ehemalige Firma (de)
|
| dbo:fate
| |
| dbo:foundedBy
| |
| dbo:foundingDate
| |
| dbo:foundingYear
| |
| dbo:industry
| |
| dbo:keyPerson
| |
| dbo:locationCity
| |
| dbo:locationCountry
| |
| dbo:numberOfEmployees
|
- 400 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
|
| dbo:numberOfLocations
|
- 1 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
|
| dbo:parentCompany
| |
| dbo:thumbnail
| |
| dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
| |
| dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
| |
| dbp:align
| |
| dbp:author
|
- Stephen Kurtzman, project lead on the IBM Microkernel, and subsequently Kernel Manager at Taligent (en)
- Nisus Software, March 1995, after three months of Taligent training and three of coding (en)
- Steve Jobs, 1994 (en)
- Tom Saulpaugh in 1999, Macintosh system software engineer from June 1985, co-architect of Copland and JavaOS (en)
- Taligent CTO, Mike Potel (en)
- Tom Dougherty, Taligent engineer (en)
|
| dbp:developer
| |
| dbp:divisions
|
- Native system, development tools, complementary products (en)
|
| dbp:fate
| |
| dbp:founded
| |
| dbp:founder
| |
| dbp:hqLocationCity
| |
| dbp:hqLocationCountry
| |
| dbp:imageCaption
|
- The De Anza 3 building of Apple Campus, the site of Taligent's headquarters (en)
|
| dbp:industry
| |
| dbp:keyPeople
|
- Erich Ringewald, Mike Potel, Mark Davis (en)
|
| dbp:license
| |
| dbp:logo
| |
| dbp:name
|
- CommonPoint (en)
- Taligent Inc. (en)
|
| dbp:numEmployees
| |
| dbp:numEmployeesYear
| |
| dbp:numLocations
| |
| dbp:operatingSystem
| |
| dbp:parent
| |
| dbp:products
|
- CommonPoint, Places for Project Teams (en)
|
| dbp:programmingLanguage
| |
| dbp:quote
|
- When is Pink going to ship? Two years. (en)
- TalOS was unique in its architecture. It was object oriented from the kernel up, and provided true pre-emptive multi-threaded multi-tasking. The end user experience revolved around a compound document-centric, multi-user networked, direct manipulation interface with infinite session undo. The principal interface theme was People, Places and Things. The networked interface represented remote users, as well as collaborative work spaces. In many ways it was more a graphic MOO than a traditional operating system. (en)
|
| dbp:quoted
| |
| dbp:source
|
- dbr:John_C._Dvorak
- Steve Jobs, 1995 (en)
- A Beginner's Guide to Developing with the Taligent Application Frameworks, Hewlett-Packard, 1995 (en)
- —a running joke at Apple (en)
|
| dbp:text
|
- 1.57788E7 (dbd:second)
- [NeXT is] ahead today, but the race is far from over. ... [In 1996,] Cairo will be very close behind, and Taligent will be very far behind. (en)
- Taligent's role in the world is to create an environment in which all the applications we buy individually are built directly into the operating system. Because the apps are programmable, you can put together your own custom-made suites. Taligent could mean the end of all applications as we know them. ... The suites are here to battle Taligent. (en)
- The pace of addition [to System 6 and 7] was staggering, so much so that Apple never had time to recode the low-level OS and fix some of its shortcomings. By 1990, these shortcomings, including no preemptive multitasking and no memory protection for applications, began to affect the quality of the product. The Mac was the easiest computer to use but also one of the most fragile. (en)
- No company is going to bet their project or job on a piece of software that is a 1.0 release. [Taligent has] another year or year and a half's worth of work ahead, because you only prove reliability from being out there. (en)
- [Taligent engineer Tom Chavez's] theory is that for the past few years [the industry's] hardware has become very fast and that it's traditional OSes that have been slowing [users] down. (en)
- Once you learn CommonPoint and Taligent's system you will be [an] expert C++ programmer, whether you want to or not. ... Basing apps on CommonPoint results in programs that are more consistent internally, cleaner, and allows the framework to do significant grunt work in cooperation with the Taligent environment. ... Taligent's frameworks are all coordinated much better than others I've seen. They're designed to work together with the underlying kernel, in a fashion similar to the Mac's ROM Toolbox calls, but on a supremely more advanced level. Nextstep is the closest thing to Taligent but it's already old and not nearly as advanced—despite the fact that until now it's been the fastest development platform, bar none. We have spoken with people who have used Nextstep and we considered it, but it's clear to us that CommonPoint is the next Nextstep, if you will. (en)
- In a survey we conducted, learnability was mentioned as a main inhibitor to framework use by developers familiar with frameworks, and early developers with Taligent experienced "a stiff learning curve" even for experienced C++ programmers. ... The time it takes to become a productive developer with Taligent frameworks is long ." (en)
|
| dbp:type
| |
| dbp:website
|
- 0001-03-28 (xsd:gMonthDay)
|
| dbp:width
| |
| dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
| |
| dct:subject
| |
| gold:hypernym
| |
| rdf:type
| |
| rdfs:label
|
- Taligent (en)
- Taligent (de)
- Taligent (ja)
|
| owl:sameAs
| |
| prov:wasDerivedFrom
| |
| foaf:depiction
| |
| foaf:homepage
| |
| foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
| |
| foaf:name
| |
| is dbo:developer
of | |
| is dbo:institution
of | |
| is dbo:wikiPageRedirects
of | |
| is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
of | |
| is dbp:influencedBy
of | |
| is dbp:otherArticles
of | |
| is dbp:workplaces
of | |
| is rdfs:seeAlso
of | |
| is foaf:primaryTopic
of | |