The printing company of Xerox but they thought it was useless and gave it away to Apple (ironic). Then Microsoft took it from Apple causing them to get sued. But Microsoft won. (interesting fact.. you may delete if you want... Microsoft's lawyer was Jon R. Stark... My math teacher and retired lawyer LOL)
The last answer to this question was incorrect. The correct answer is Xerox invented the GUI, and Douglas Englebradt invented the mouse. Note: Douglas was not an Apple employee at all.
xerox
a user-friendly computer program that allows the user to point and click on icons to make the computer function
a user-friendly computer program that allows the user to point and click on icons to make the computer function
Unix
MS-DOS was user unfriendly it did not have the option to click on icons
First, sign in to T-Mobil's website. Second, click on the tab labeled Communications. Third, click the Desktop Interface Link. Fourth, click on the Tmail link.
"Graphical" means pictures, so yes, most user interfaces are graphical now. When you click on an icon to open a file or program, that's a graphical interface. A text interface was the standard before graphical interfaces took the computer world by storm.
If your on XP control panel / network management / right click on the interface you want / properties / highlight tcp-ip and click advanced If your on Vista control panel / network and sharing centre / (look on the left hand panel) manage network connections / right click on the interface you want / properties / highlight tcp-ip version 4 and click advanced
The keyboard and screen are often called the console, sometimes it's just the screen. The GUI (Graphical User Interface) is the application programs that allow you to point and click. The idea of a Graphical User Interface is that most of the computer controls are performed by moving a mouse and clicking on icons. To reiterate, the GUI is the application, the console is the hardware.
I have a PC so I usually click on the Start button then I'll click on Control Panel, from there click on the System icon and the System Properties will pop up. Click on the Hardware tab, then click on the Device Manager button and it'll will show a list of all the hardware devices on your computer. Hopefully you don't have a MAC because I don't have an answer for that :)
Either the GUI (Graphical User Interface) which is what most users see everyday as a point and click system. Or the Command line which is all text based from the command prompt
Air Mouse - (Point and Click TV, Point and Click Device, Point and Click Technology, Pointing Device.) - An infrared remote control mouse used to operate a computer, Web TV, set-top box, etc. This is a revolutionary point and click device. With it you point the remote control device at the TV screen and click on it to activate links that are displayed on the TV screen.
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)