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Microsoft Bob

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A picture of the Microsoft Bob start up screen. (see Microsoft Home)
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A picture of the Microsoft Bob start up screen. (see Microsoft Home)

Microsoft Bob was a product released by Microsoft in March 1995 as an adventure game-like interface for performing tasks on one's computer. Despite its ambitious nature, Bob failed to penetrate the market and is widely considered a major failure for Microsoft. [[Citing sources citation needed]]

Origins

Microsoft Bob was designed to be a user friendly interface for Microsoft Windows version 3.1, replacing the Program Manager. The project was at one point managed by Melinda French, Bill Gates' girlfriend at the time.[link] The two later married. At the time she left Microsoft she was Product Unit Manager for a group which included Bob and three other Microsoft titles. Microsoft originally had the domain name bob.com for the product but traded it to Bob Kerstein for the windows2000.com domain. [[Citing sources citation needed]]

Features

Bob includes various office suite programs such as a calendar, a finance application, and a word processor. The user interface was designed to be helpful to novice computer users, but many saw its methods of assistance as too cute and involved. Each action, such as creating a new text document, featured the step-by-step tutorials no matter how many times the user had been through the process. Users were assisted by cartoon characters whose appearance was usually vaguely related to the task.

Despite its poor market showing and reputation, Bob's yellow smiley face logo became widely associated with the product.

The cartoon helper agents of Bob (version 1.0)

Bob featured a diverse selection of "guides". Each guide possessed its own unique "personality" and had its own array of animations. Although they were meant to be cute, many people found the guides to be simply annoying.

Other cartoon helper agents

Some designs of the Bob cartoons are still used in other Microsoft products:

See also

External links

 


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