Ingalls introduced Kaehler to PARC when he secured a contract with Xerox. They formed a team that included George White, who was already with the company working on
speech recognition software. The development has been touted as the first
avatar-centric reference to this kind of VR technology.
Smalltalk Kaehler was part of a group led by Dr.
Alan Kay who refined the concept of
network computing through Smalltalk. This is a system that drew from
John McCarthy's language
LISP and from simulation programming language
Simula, versions 1 and 67, which were developed by the
Norwegian Computing Center. In Kay's account of Smalltalk's early development, he cited key milestones attributed to Kaehler. According to Kay, along with Ingalls, Dave Robson, and
Diana Merry, for instance, Kaehler successfully implemented the Smalltalk-76 system from scratch within a period of seven months. It constituted 50 classes that composed 180 pages of source code. This system gave Smalltalk more speed, and the development of a system tracer used to clone Smalltalk-76 since the technology can write out new virtual memories from their prior iterations. future leader of the
RISC-V movement. == Apple ==