GeoWorks Ensemble In November 1990, GeoWorks (formerly
Berkeley Softworks) released PC/GEOS for
IBM PC compatible systems. Commonly referred to as
GeoWorks Ensemble, it was incompatible with the earlier
8-bit versions of GEOS for
Commodore and
Apple II computers, but provided numerous enhancements, including scalable fonts and multitasking on
IBM PC XT- and
AT-class PC clones. GeoWorks saw a market opportunity to provide a graphical user interface for the 16 million older-model PCs that were unable to run Microsoft Windows 2.x. GEOS was packaged with a suite of productivity applications. Each had a name prefixed by "Geo": GeoWrite, GeoDraw, GeoManager, GeoPlanner, GeoDex, and GeoComm. It was also bundled with many PCs at the time, but like other GUI environments for the PC platform, such as
Graphics Environment Manager (GEM), it ultimately proved less successful in the marketplace than Windows. Former CEO of GeoWorks claims that GEOS faded away "because Microsoft threatened to withdraw supply of
MS-DOS to hardware manufacturers who bundled Geoworks with their machines". In December 1992,
NEC and
Sony bundled an
original equipment manufacturer (OEM) version of GeoWorks named the CD Manager with their respective CD-ROM players that sold as retail box add-on peripherals for consumers. The NEC Bundle retailed for around $500 with a 1x external
CD-ROM,
Small Computer System Interface (
SCSI) interface controller, Labtec CD-150 amplified stereo speakers and 10 software titles. A scaled-down version of GeoWorks was used by
America Online for their MS-DOS-based AOL client software from the time of its introduction on IBM compatible PCs until the late 1990s when America Online dropped development for graphical DOS in favor of Microsoft Windows. During that time, the popular single 3.5"
self-booting disk that AOL was distributing could be hacked to
boot the GeoWorks environment. IBM released the PC/GEOS-based
EduQuest SchoolView network management tool for K-12 schools in 1994. Negotiations to make PC/GEOS an integral part of
PC DOS 7.0 failed. GeoWorks attempted to get third-party developers but was unable to get much support due to expense of the developer kit, which cost $1,000 for the manuals only, and the difficult programming environment, which required a second PC networked via serial port to run the debugger. Even though PC/GEOS is referred to as an "operating system", it still requires DOS in load. GEOS and its applications were written in a mix of 8086
assembly language (Espire), an interpreted language called
IZL, and
C (GEOS Object C: GOC) with non-standard language extensions to support the
object-oriented design. Under
DR DOS 6.0, if TASKMAX was loaded before PC/GEOS, PC/GEOS registered as graphical menu system for TASKMAX. This still worked under the pre-emptive multitasker (
EMM386 /MULTI + TASKMGR) provided by
Novell DOS 7,
OpenDOS 7.01 and
DR-DOS 7.02 (and higher), allowing for multiple GEOS and DOS applications to run concurrently. After the release of Ensemble 2.01, GeoWorks ended support for the desktop version to focus on handhelds and smart devices. Geoworks Ensemble won the 1991
Software Publishers Association Excellence in Software Award for Best Consumer Program.
NewDeal Office A newer version of PC/GEOS was marketed in the late 1990s as
NewDeal Office from NewDeal Inc. in hopes of creating a market among owners of
i386,
i486, and
Pentium PCs that could not run
Windows 95 or
Windows 98 effectively. NewDeal released three new versions of NewDeal Office (NewDeal Office 2.5, NewDeal Office 3/98 and NewDeal Office 2000) until it went bankrupt in 2000. NDO or NDO 2000 came with a web browser named Skipper or Skipper 2000, respectively.
Breadbox Ensemble After "NewDeal Inc." went out of business, Breadbox purchased the rights in the software from GeoWorks in 2001. Their newest PC/GEOS, 4.x, is now a full productivity and internet suite, including web browser (named WebMagick) as well as email. Other essential programs such as word processing, spreadsheet, flat file database and graphics applications are integrated into this package. On 14 November 2015, Frank S. Fischer, the CEO and owner of Breadbox Ensemble LLC, died of a heart attack, some time after announcing plans to bring GEOS to Android.
Versions • 1990: OS/90 beta version • 1990: geoDOS beta version • 1990: GeoWorks 1.0 • 1991: GeoWorks 1.2 • 1992: GeoWorks 1.2 Pro (with
Borland Quattro Pro for DOS with PC/GEOS "Look and Feel") • 1992: GeoWorks DTP • 1992: GeoWorks CD Manager • 1993: GeoWorks Ensemble 2.0 (new kernel PC/GEOS 2.0) • 1993: Geopublish 2.0 • 1994: Geoworks Ensemble 2.01 • 1996: NewDeal Office 2.2 • 1996: NewDeal Office 2.5 • 1996: NewDeal Publish 2.5
shareware version • 1997: NewDeal Office 97 • 1998: NewDeal Office 98 • 1999: NewDeal Office release 3 (new kernel PC/GEOS 3.0) • 1999: NewDeal Office release 3 evaluation • 1999: NewDeal Office 3.2 • 2000: NewDeal Office 3.2d (German patch) • 2000: NewDeal Office 2000 (new kernel PC/GEOS 4.0) • 2000: NewDeal Office 2000 for (for a Surf´n´Office PC from
Ted Turner IV (
MyTurn, Inc.) with help from
CNN) • 2001: BreadBox Ensemble beta version 4.0.1.1 • 2001: BreadBox Ensemble beta version 4.0.1.x • 2002: Breadbox Ensemble beta version 4.0.2.0 • 2005–March: Breadbox Ensemble version 4.1.0.0 • 2005–November: Breadbox Ensemble version 4.1.2.0 • 2009–August: Breadbox Ensemble version 4.1.3.0 == PEN/GEOS ==