Talk:History of RISC OS

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Arthur written in BASIC?

Article move after start of discussion. -- Trevj (talk) 08:11, 26 April 2012 (UTC)

http://productsdb.riscos.com/admin/riscos.htm states You may like to know that Acorn's first release of the Desktop in 1987 was written in BBC BASIC! Can this be verified? It sounds implausible but perhaps there's truth in it. Which published articles are there which refer to the work of Paul Fellows and his team? --Trevj (talk) 10:50, 30 June 2011 (UTC)

The desktop environment was indeed one BASIC program, with what we would now call 'apps' loaded as BASIC libraries. I wrote my own extensions and modified it quite a bit. Of course it relied upon the fledgling WindowManager module (or whatever it was called then) to do the WIMP stuff, but that didn't do task switching back then. nemo (talk) 09:21, 3 October 2011 (UTC)
That's useful to know. I've retrieved my old Micro User and A&B Computing mags from '87 but haven't found anything yet to back this up in reliable sources (that's not to say that you're not a reliable source, but I'm sure you know what I mean!). Is this stuff documented anywhere so that it can be included? Thanks. --Trevj (talk) 11:34, 3 October 2011 (UTC)
Well, one could purchase the Classic ROMs Collection from RISC OS Ltd (it’s a tenner) which includes two versions of Arthur... but I’m tempted to remain unreliable and £10 better off. ;-) nemo (talk) 12:42, 21 October 2011 (UTC)
Added a ref from PCW in '87. -- Trevj (talk) 11:24, 25 April 2012 (UTC)
I'm now reincluding this after rewording. -- Trevj (talk) 08:20, 26 April 2012 (UTC)

Arthur was written in assembler. The Arthur desktop was a demo program written in BBC basic by Richard Manby, who also wrote the graphic libraries for Arthur. These things are the facts : Paul fellows , Arthur team leader 1985-87

Also the Arthur == Arm on Thursday is the correct quote, Paul Fellows.

I don't have any web sources to quote for this, but would point out that, How could I have original web sources FFS, this was how many years before the web existed???

Anyone wants to quote me, I am Paul.fellows@ntlworld.com — Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.6.155.46 (talk) 22:50, 29 April 2014 (UTC)

Hi and thanks for your note. I'm sorry to have missed your talk to ROUGOL members in Oct 2012. Perhaps some of that transcript can be used for sourcing, although generally sources with more traditional editorial rigour are preferred. Regarding the "ARm on THURsday" thing, the ROUGOL transript states "I believe that the word Arthur comes from the fact they wanted ARm on THURsday, because of the crisis, but that's my memory of it, and there's a bit of debate and other people may say different things." This isn't quite the same as what's noted above.
As for web sources, yes it's frustrating that much of this history obviously predates the web. However, Wikipedia does not insist on online sources. I have previously included sources from printed magazines within a few articles, and there's no good reason not to do so here. The main barriers to doing so (as I see it) are access to such printed sources, and the searching of their contents.
Anyway, I'll drop you an email some time when I'm a bit less busy. All the best, and thanks again. -- Trevj (talk · contribs) 07:59, 30 April 2014 (UTC)

Early development

ROM module

Needs update

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