The Interactive Encyclopedia System

The Interactive Encyclopedia System, or TIES, was a hypertext system developed in the University of Maryland Human-Computer Interaction Lab by Ben Shneiderman in 1983. The earliest versions of TIES ran in DOS text mode, using the cursor arrow keys for navigating through information. A later version of HyperTIES for the Sun workstation was developed by Don Hopkins using the NeWS window system, with an authoring tool based on UniPress's Gosling Emacs text editor.

Screenshot of TIES

HyperTIES

The TIES program has evolved into the HyperTIES commercial product, sold by the Cognetics Corporation. HyperTIES has a small feature set and has touch-screen support which makes it optimal for public displays and information kiosks. As for navigation types, only reference links are supported, which can be either text or graphics. The mouse pointer also highlights anchors when passing over them.

gollark: Aren't they 3 impossible to attain?
gollark: ++remind 8h30m fix caching in onstat
gollark: It is. We were able to implement computers using certain bread configurations, and instantiate human minds on them.
gollark: osmarkstokens™ work by adding your ownership of a thing to your osmarks.net achievements list.
gollark: Such small-scale and low-tech apionics operations, as well as the obvious output limitations, can't hope to match the bee quality produced by our automated hyperparallel apiolectromagnetic gradient descent algorithms.
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