Bruno (software)
BRUNO was the first commercial computer software program for creating presentations (Presentation program) using a WYSIWYG user interface. BRUNO, which originated on the Hewlett Packard HP-1000 F-Series[1] computer, was developed by Jim Long and Philip Walden of Hewlett Packard. The application was finished in 1979 and was used around the world by HP customers. BRUNO was later ported to the HP-3000[2] and renamed HP-Draw.[3][4]
Trivia
- Bruno was named after a hand puppet used to train field sales representatives.
- Bruno became HP-Draw mostly because Robert Dea, a HP-3000 team member, and Philip Walden shared work topics during their long van pool rides.
gollark: We can assume that the AI runs faster than humans because people will only run training for a few months at most before they get bored and stop.
gollark: Legal action was maybe also bad.
gollark: I do think the DALL-E Mini name was kind of bad.
gollark: I could automatically do business with an associate though. Probably not fast enough to trademark that much, but it should be possible to do short word sequences.
gollark: Can anyone stop me from trademarking all possible byte sequences (up to some length) preemptively?
References
- HP1000 F-Series
- Swift, Janet (November 1983). "Convenient Creation and Manipulation of Presentation Aids" (PDF). HP Journal. 34: 13–16 – via HP Labs HP Journal Archive.
- HP Draw pg16
- HPDRAW
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