Author: JT Smith
LinuxPr goes on to say, “The Motif toolkit is used by corporate developers to create custom, mission
critical applications that are not available “off-the-shelf.” When a Boeing
airplane flies, a financial transaction is performed on Wall Street, a subway
train of the Boston MBTA or San Francisco’s BART is switched onto the
right track, a network communication problem is diagnosed and bypassed
by US West, a family is entertained by the latest animated movie from Walt
Disney or Dreamworks, a US defense system built by Lockheed is tested in
a drill or real combat, or a spacecraft is launched into space by NASA, the
custom software that made it all possible probably employed the Motif
toolkit to build the user interface.”
critical applications that are not available “off-the-shelf.” When a Boeing
airplane flies, a financial transaction is performed on Wall Street, a subway
train of the Boston MBTA or San Francisco’s BART is switched onto the
right track, a network communication problem is diagnosed and bypassed
by US West, a family is entertained by the latest animated movie from Walt
Disney or Dreamworks, a US defense system built by Lockheed is tested in
a drill or real combat, or a spacecraft is launched into space by NASA, the
custom software that made it all possible probably employed the Motif
toolkit to build the user interface.”