Jump to content

Bruno (software)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

BRUNO was the first commercial computer software program for creating presentations (Presentation program) using a WYSIWYG user interface. BRUNO, which originated on the Hewlett Packard HP 1000 F-Series computer, was developed by Jim Long and Philip Walden of Hewlett Packard.[citation needed] The application was finished in 1979 and was used around the world by HP customers. BRUNO was later ported to the HP-3000[1] and renamed HP-Draw.[2][3]

Trivia

[edit]
  • Bruno was named after a hand puppet used to train field sales representatives.
  • Bruno became HP-Draw mostly because Robert Dea, a HP-3000 team member, and Philip Walden shared work topics during their long van pool rides.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Purnaveja, Chayaboon; Swift, Janet (November 1983). "Convenient Creation and Manipulation of Presentation Aids" (PDF). HP Journal. 34 (11): 13–16 – via HP Labs HP Journal Archive.
  2. ^ HP Draw pg16
  3. ^ HPDRAW