NeXT

The web itself, the first web browser, the first web server, HTTP protocol... they were all created on this.

Basically everything that allows you to shitpost has been created on a Steve Jobs-made computer.

How does that make you feel, Sup Forums?

Other urls found in this thread:

tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1945
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

I'm dedicating all my shitposts to based Jobs from this day forward.

>this is what macfags actually believe

>t. macfag

NeXT was amazing.

Didn't we just have that thread? Also what the fuck is wrong with your fonts?

>doesn't understand bitmap fonts
>doesn't know how easy it is to make those pics in gimp
>t. macfag

>everything object-oriented that was a vague success was made on this
nothing of value was lost to it and job's demise.

>How does that make you feel, Sup Forums?
sad that it became the modern mac instead of becoming free software

if it became free software, it would have been dead like every other OS that was open sourced by a big company. check how Plan9 ended./

feels like being baited by OP

NeXT was actually good though.

I feel honored. Is there anything I can do to show my respect OP?

HTTP was a mistake

kek'd. https wasnt?

Nextstep was basically what OS X is. Shitty BSD with cool ui and a lot of useful applications on neat hardware

>thank you for calling apple tech support
finally a tech support that speaks english

All that shit was basically reskinned versions of things that already existed. Have you ever wondered why HTTP looks so similar to the email format?

gnustep is somehow still alive

plan9 is more alive than it
???

>Have you ever wondered why HTTP looks so similar to the email format?
Not even once.
But then, I'm not reaching.

HTTP a shit

Just like your entire life.

Menlo is a fuck, isn't it?

HTTPS was 10 mistakes, binarily speaking.

It's no stretch to observe that HTTP requests and responses, once past the first line, are MIME-formatted messages just like an email server would exchange.

>tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1945
>Messages are passed in a format similar to that used by Internet Mail [7] and the Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) [5].