Hall of Fame
Since we published our first Editors' Choice Awards in 1989, we've
given over 200 awards.
Sometimes our aim is true to the mark -- we were among the first to
give an award to the VBX, for example -- and sometimes our crystal ball
becomes clouded (whatever did happen to WingZ?). But of the products
we've given kudow, some have truly stood the test of time. These are
the recipients of the BYTE Hall of Fame awards.
Adobe Illustrator
Where would the graphics arts community be without this war-horse
drawing program? The
recipient of many readers' choice awards and editors' choice awards
over the years, Illustrator is still the de facto standard for drawing.
Adobe Systems, San Jose, California; 408-536-6000.
http://www.adobe.com
Novell NetWare 3.x
Devoid of a fancy graphical user interface, NetWare 3.x nonetheless
became the standard for file and print services. Why? It's fast, well
understood, and very reliable. Beyond that, it was the first version of
NetWare to support a standard method of extensibility: the NetWare
loadable model (NLM), which enabled a new category of server -- the
application server. Novell, Provo, UT; 801-429-5508.
http://www.novell.com
World Wide Web
Tim Berners-Lee probably never thought that people would be talking
about the Web as the next television. But this hyperlink-based medium
for sharing information, built around the relatively simple standards
of HTTP and HTML, has become the way to compute in the 1990s. And the
future looks even better, with new protocols and technologies promising
to enable yet more types of applications. World Wide Web Consortium.
http://www.w3.org