Bill Gates has revealed that the Control-Alt-Delete function for
Microsoft computer systems was a mistake that ended up sticking.
The Microsoft founder explained that the same function could have
been easily achieved by having users only hit one button on their
keyboard but a design flaw required the use of three fingers instead.
‘We could have had a single button, but the guy who did the IBM
keyboard design didn’t wanna give us our single button,’ he said at a
talk at Harvard University.
Oops: Bill Gates admitted that there is no real reason why the
Ctrl-Alt-Del function needed to involve three keys but the keyboard
designer did not allow it
Three-finger salute: Gates was asked about the quirk during a talk
at Harvard, where he dropped out before eventually receiving an honorary
degree
The so-called ‘three finger salute’ has a variety of uses but was
originally meant to serve as a sort of ‘wake up’ call for the computer.
‘Because when you turn your computer on, you’re going to see some
screens, and eventually type your password in, you want to have
something you do with the keyboard that is signalling to a very low
level of the software actually hard coded in the hardware,’ he
explained.
Man behind the move: David Bradley was the keyboard designer who arranged the three button combination
It has been known in tech circles that IBM designer David Bradley was
the one to come up with the plan to use three keys rather than one key
for that command, but the Harvard talk was the first time that Gates
readily admitted that it was a mistake.
Bradley spoke about the design quirk years ago at the 20th anniversary of IBM, trying to fairly distribute the responsibility.
‘I may have invented it, but Bill made it famous,’ he said at the time.
Gates didn’t let it slip by without eschewing all credit, however, as he went on to praise their keyboard designs.
‘We did some very clever things- the IBM PC character set, usually
you have 128 characters like the lower case and upper case but we took
the upper ones and put like suit symbols in- we were able to experiment
with a lot of stuff but more on the software side and not the hardware,’
he said.
Gates’ talk was a part of a fundraising event for Harvard, his alma mater.
He attended the prestigious college as an undergraduate but didn’t
make it to his graduation ceremony on time as he dropped out to start
his computer company. He was eventually awarded an honorary degree
nearly three decades later.
0 comments:
Post a Comment