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Search "Graphical user interface"
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Graphical user interface | |
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About 10 pages (3,011 words) in 3 products |
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Encyclopedia and Summary Information
summary from source:

Graphical User Interface (Gui) Summary
896 words, approx. 3 pages A graphical user interface (GUI, pronounced GOO ee) enables users to interact with a computer graphically by using a mouse (or equivalent device) and keyboard to make choices from pull-down menus and groups of icons on a display screen. Most GUIs...
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Graphical user interface Information
1,976 words, approx. 7 pages
 A graphical user interface or GUI (IPA: /ˈɡuːiː/) is a type of user interface which allows people to interact with a computer and computer-controlled devices. Instead of offering only text menus, or requiring typed commands: graphical icons, visual...




summary from source:
 Software Magazine
Graphical interfaces give power to users.
11/01/1990: 2,237 words, approx. 8 pages Graphical user interfaces (GUIs) are being used by project management users as the preferred way to communicate with the software, with the mouse and the pick-and-point features and other user-friendly capabilities. More important is the ability for users to view project scheduling in graphical...
summary from source:
 T H E Journal (Technological Horizons In Education)
GUI advantages validated. (graphical user interface)
08/01/1990: 544 words, approx. 2 pages Microsoft Corp and Zenith Data Systems have compared the performance of graphical user interfaces (GUIs) and character-based interfaces (CUIs) with both experienced and inexperienced users, resulting in the first study of its kind. The study reveals that GUI offers more benefits than CUI in...
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 AP News
Gates promises Vista to wow PC buyers
1/29/2007: 617 words, approx. 2 pages "Wow" hasn't tended to be a big part of Bill Gates' vocabulary, but to hear him speak in the hours before Microsoft Corp.'s planned launch of the long-awaited Vista operating system, you'd never know it."This 'Wow' thing is a great way of describing what we've...
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 Investor's Business Daily
Focus On The Long Term
10/2/2007: 454 words, approx. 2 pages Companies lose their edge and fail to innovate for a number of reasons, says former Fortune 500 exec Tom Gorman, author of the new book "Innovation."The reasons include:Not recognizing threats. Common threats range from new rivals to aging product lines. One of the least expected...


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Graphical user interface | |
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About 10 pages (3,011 words) in 3 products |
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