Apple Macintosh
The command line interface and the graphical user interface.
GUI, pronounced "gooey"; This stands for "Graphical User Interface" Another term you may hear used in connection with this is "WIMP". (Windows, Icons, Menus, Pointers)
Despite being created by different software developers, most operating systems today are graphical-interface-oriented. Also, most of the OS's, including three of the most popular (Windows, Macintosh and Linux) support multitasking.
Windows applications are graphical interface operating systems that Microsoft Windows has. They are programs that are written to run on Windows operating systems.
The functions of an operating system include booting the computer and performing basic tasks. The operating system manages the keyboard and mouse. It provides a graphical user interface.
GUI (graphical user interface)
The Mac's operating system, like most operating systems, provides a means by which software can utilise the computer's hardware and it also presents the user with a graphical interface to facilitate operating the computer.
G-U-I Graphical User Interface(Some people pronounce it goo-ee)
Very true - the X-windows graphical interface was not available in Unix systems for a long time after Unix was available.
Very true - the X-windows graphical interface was not available in Unix systems for a long time after Unix was available.
Several different versions of UNIX have GUI's or Graphical User Interfaces. The most common example of UNIX with an interface is Mac OS X.
This generally describes the screen you are looking at in a program, and the icons you may click to accomplish (tasks). They are "graphical," rather than, say, verbal, you are the user, and the page is the interface.