Ví dụ về việc sử dụng Visicalc trong Tiếng anh và bản dịch của chúng sang Tiếng việt
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It all started with VisiCalc.
I aced the case. VisiCalc was already useful.
VisiCalc is the first spreadsheet program.
In October of 1979, we shipped VisiCalc.
VisiCalc was the first spreadsheet program.
It's hard to overstate how important VisiCalc was to the emergence of the computer industry.
Lotus 1-2-3 drove sales of the PC due to the improvements in speed andgraphics compared to VisiCalc on the Apple II.
Quickly overtook VisiCalc, as well as Multiplan and SuperCalc, two VisiCalc competitors.
The 1-2-3 menu structure(example, slash File Erase) was itself an advancedversion of single letter menus introduced in VisiCalc.
VisiCalc was not merely a microcomputer version of a mainframe application, after all-- it was a new type of application.
Microsoft's first killer app was Microsoft Excel,which unseated the reigning spreadsheet champions Apple VisiCalc and Lotus 1-2-3.
On a more personal note, Steve said,"If VisiCalc had been written for some other computer, you would be interviewing somebody else right now.".
Microsoft, Personal Software, and Peachtree Software were among the developers of nine launch titles,including EasyWriter and VisiCalc.
VisiCalc went on to become the first"killer application", an application that was so compelling, people would buy a particular computer just to use it.
Originally code-named“EP” for“Electronic Paper,” Microsoft built Multiplan for CP/M(!) using p-code(see the Word for DOS slide)to compete with VisiCalc.
VisiCalc was the first electronic spreadsheet on a microcomputer, it helped turn the Apple II computer into a popular and used system.
Even as the believers gather, the painters in the Coliseum sign room are adding to the pantheon,carefully lettering'VISICALC' in giant black on yellow.
The Apple II's killer app was VisiCalc, a groundbreaking spreadsheet software that propelled the computer ahead of market-leaders Tandy and Commodore.
The Apple II received a great boost inpopularity when it became the host machine for VisiCalc, the first electronic spreadsheet(computerized accounting program).
His idea became VisiCalc, the first spreadsheet, and the"killer application" that turned the personal computer from a hobby for computer enthusiasts into a business tool.
You could tell that things had really changed when, six years later,the Wall Street Journal ran an editorial that assumed you knew what VisiCalc was and maybe even were using it.
Compared to earlier programs, VisiCalc allowed one to easily construct free-form calculation systems for practically any purpose, the limitations being primarily memory and speed related.
While it only supported typing of upper-case letters, the Apple II sported color graphics,BASIC, VisiCalc(the first spreadsheet) and the much-loved educational game Oregon Trail.
VisiCalc was long dead before Office was a gleam in Charles Simonyi's eye, but many of the VisiCalc constructs lived on, both in Excel and in other products that fell to the Microsoft juggernaut.
LANPAR was an acronym: LANguage for Programming Arrays at Random.[8] VisiCalc was the first electronic spreadsheet on a microcomputer,[9] and it helped turn the Apple II computer into a popular and widely used system.
VisiCalc was the first spreadsheet that combined all essential features of modern spreadsheet applications(except for forward referencing/natural order recalculation), such as WYSIWYG interactive user interface, automatic recalculation, status and formula lines, range copying with relative and absolute references, formula building by selecting referenced cells.
An independent developer came up with the first spreadsheet andpersonal finance program for personal computers, VisiCalc, and for a while it was available only on the Apple II, turning the computer into something that businesses and families could justify buying.
The first spreadsheet, VisiCalc, had helped launch the Apple II as one of the earliest personal computers in business use. With IBM's entry into the market, VisiCalc was slow to respond, and when they did, they launched what was essentially a straight port of their existing system in spite of the greatly expanded hardware capabilities.
With IBM's entry into the market, VisiCalc was slow to respond, and when they did, they launched what was essentially a straight port of their existing system in spite of the greatly expanded hardware capabilities.