Rhapsody is the code name given to
Apple Computer's next-generation
operating system during the period of its development between Apple's purchase of
NeXT in late 1996 and the announcement of
Mac OS X in 1998. It consisted primarily of the
OPENSTEP operating system ported to the
PowerMac along with new graphics in the GUI to make it appear more Mac-like. Several existing Mac OS technologies were also ported to Rhapsody, including
QuickTime and
AppleSearch. Rhapsody could also run a selection of existing Mac OS programs through the "Blue Box" emulation layer. Compared to the "invisible" blue box in OS X, Rhapsody's Blue Box was "noticeable" as it opened a Classic like program and there was no
Carbon to help port existing Mac software to the new OS without the Blue Box.
History
Rhapsody was first demonstrated at the 1997
Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC). There were two subsequent general Developer Releases for computers with
Intel x86 or
PowerPC processors. The full version was intended for release in spring of 1998. At the 1998
MacWorld Expo in
New York,
Steve Jobs announced that Rhapsody would be released as
Mac OS X Server 1.0 (which shipped in 1999). No home version of Rhapsody would be released. Its
code base was
forked into
Darwin, the
open source underpinnings of Mac OS X.
Design
The defining features of the operating system were a
Mach microkernel, a
BSD operating system layer (based on
4.4BSD), the
Yellow Box object-oriented frameworks from
OPENSTEP, the
Blue Box compatibility environment for running "
Classic" Macintosh applications (PowerPC version only), and a
Java virtual machine.
The user interface was modeled after Mac OS. The Workspace Manager serves in the same capacity as the Finder in the Mac OS and was derived from the Workspace Manager used in NEXTSTEP/OPENSTEP. Yet, Rhapsody had some elements inherited from OPENSTEP notably the column view when navigating files.
Much of the initial work on Rhapsody eventually made it into Mac OS X. Apple's QuickTime and Java implementations were all part of the transition towards the future Mac OS X along with the integration of the classic Mac OS API with the modern OS X, known as Carbon.
Name
The name
Rhapsody followed a pattern of music-related code names which Apple designated for operating system releases during the 1990s. Another next-generation operating system, which was to be the successor to the never-completed
Copland operating system, was code-named "Gershwin" after
George Gershwin, composer of
Rhapsody in Blue. (Copland itself was named after another
American composer,
Aaron Copland). Other code names include Harmony (
Mac OS 7.6), Tempo (
Mac OS 8), Allegro (
Mac OS 8.5), and Sonata (
Mac OS 9).
Timeline of releases
| Release Date
| Product name
| Version |
| 14 October 1997
| Rhapsody Developer Release DR-1
| 5.0 |
| 11 May 1998
| Rhapsody Developer Release DR-2
| 5.1 |
| 11 June 1999
| Mac OS X Server 1.0
| 5.3 |
| 2000
| Mac OS X Server 1.2
| 5.6 |
External links