Source code for Apple's legendary Lisa operating system to be released for free in 2018
You'll soon be able to take a huge trip down memory lane when it comes to Apple's computer efforts. The Computer History Museum has announced that the source code for the Lisa, Apple's computer that predated the Mac, has been recovered and is being reviewed by Apple itself...
The announcement was made by Al Kossow, a Software Curator at the Computer History Museum. Kossow says that source code for both the operating system and applications has been recovered. Once that code is finished being reviewed by Apple, the Computer History Museum will make the code available sometime in 2018.
While you've been able to run emulators of the Lisa operating system before, this is notable as it's not just a third-party hack solution, but rather Apple is directly involved and the full code will be available for everyone.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by shortscreen on Friday December 29 2017, @07:17AM
That can't be the reason. Having an HDD in the first place was obscene luxury back then.
I never used a Lisa, but as I recall reading in DTACK Grounded [easy68k.com], it had an MMU which slowed down memory access time (68000 had no on-chip MMU) and the OS was written in a high level language.