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Apple’s Classic Mac Era Forays Into ‘Apps as Tiled Buttons’ Simplified Computing: At Ease and Launcher

Apple’s Classic Mac Era Forays Into ‘Apps as Tiled Buttons’ Simplified Computing: At Ease and Launcher

Some historical follow-up regarding just-click-it launching and apps as tiled buttons with a uniform square shape. Back in the System 7 era in the 1990s, Apple sold (sold!) a product called At Ease (via Nathan Lineback’s venerable GUI Galley):


Screenshot of At Ease on System 7.5.

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I don’t recall ever using At Ease, nor seeing anyone who did.

A few years later, Apple built a feature called Launcher into Mac OS 8 (via LinkedResources):


Screenshot of Launcher on Mac OS 8.

Launcher, I never used personally, but I do remember being something of a thing. At Ease was an early effort to create a primitive “can’t mess it up” baby computer mode for the Mac. Launcher was more of a stilted attempt to sherlock great utilities like DragThing (R.I.P.). It wasn’t a baby computer mode, but an attempt to provide a bit of a power-user mode. I mean, when you first tried it, one of the default apps it included was Script Editor. Even the name “Launcher” evokes power-user utilities of today like Alfred, Raycast, and my favorite, LaunchBar.

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