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April 15, 1992
Andy will demonstrate an advanced user interface prototype
for an all digital home entertainment system he developed in
1989 for Frox, a Silicon Valley start-up company. The object-oriented
system contain many interesting new ideas and approaches, especially
in the area of end-user customization and graphic scripting languages.
Andy will explain the rationale for many of his design decisions
and the underlying values that are at the heart of the work.
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Andy graduated from Brown University in June 1975 with a B.S.
with honors in Computer Science. While attending graduate school
at U.C. Berkeley in January 1978, he purchased an Apple II computer,
which changed his life. He began developing software peripherals
for the Apple II, eventually starting working at Apple Computer
as a systems programmer in August 1979. He developed a number
of peripheral products for the Apple II, including the Silentype
printer, a low cost graphic printer as well as the first 80-column
card for the Apple II. In February 1981, he became one of the
principal members of the team responsible for the design of the
Macintosh, a revolutionary personal computer known for its innovative
design and radical ease of use. He designed and implemented about
one third of the Macintosh system software including the User
Interface ToolBox and desk accessories like the Control Panel
and Scrapbook. Andy left Apple in March 1984 and has developed
a number of major products on his own since then, including ThunderScan,
a low cost, high resolution scanner. He continued to develop
important system software for Apple, including Switcher, the
Mac's first multi-tasking environment, and QuickerDraw, a graphic
package which tripled the speed of key color graphics routines.
In 1986, he become a founding shareholder of Radius, Inc. where
he developed innovative software for the Radius Full Page Display,
which pioneered the concept of utilizing multiple screens in
a single coordinate space. He also wrote the system software
for the Radius Accelerator and other Radius products. In May
of 1990, Andy became a co-founder of General Magic, Inc., a start-up
company involved in developing a new category of consumer electronics
products called "personal intelligent communicators".
Andy desires to make computers and consumer products even more
accessible to ordinary people and hopes to develop more innovative,
fun products in the coming years.
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