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- AOCE aimed to fix all of these issues at the same time.
- AOCE quietly disappeared and was no longer supported in Mac OS 7.6.
- Several parts of the AOCE engine were useful on their own, notably the Keychain.
- In 1996 Apple Computer quietly dropped their efforts to market AOCE, and the project quickly disappeared.
- AOCE would normally store a user's e-mail on their computer, as opposed to a server.
- By early 1993 the " client side " of AOCE was nearing completion, which they now referred to as PowerTalk.
- By 1996 Apple had given up on AOCE, and started talking about the CyberDog project based on the OpenDoc platform.
- This release was a bundle of 7.1 with AppleScript tools, QuickTime and Apple Open Collaboration Environment ( AOCE ).
- This way they only had to remember a single password for the keychain; AOCE would retrieve the credentials for a particular service on demand.
- However, in order to get the keychain, you had to install all of AOCE, a cost the users were not willing to pay.
- The basic AOCE protocol would notice these machines when attempting delivery, and send to them first, thereby eliminating the delays and centralizing storage and maintenance.
- The AOCE project suffered from what is known as second-system effect, where engineers spend considerable time designing a system that does " everything ".
- AOCE / PowerTalk was heavily marketed between 1993 and 1995, but the hardware requirements meant that most users couldn't even install it, let alone use it.
- Each endpoint, a mail server for instance, was driven by a plug-in extension that was driven by a common AOCE-supplied queue and queue viewer.
- AOCE understood that users were not always connected to the network, so outbound mail was cached on the sender's machine until both the sender and recipient were online.
- Apple started a pre-release marketing campaign, telling their larger customers and even 3rd party e-mail vendors that AOCE would soon arrive and change the market completely.
- Development of AOCE started in 1989, largely the " pet project " of Apple Fellow Gursharan Sidhu, formerly engineering lead at Apple for LaserWriter, AppleShare and related networking products.
- AOCE's "'Open Directory "'and related software introduced the concept of directory entries ( such as business cards ) as first-class desktop objects.
- Adding a simple feature like " mail this document " to an application required wading through hundreds of pages of documentation, and writing a core AOCE component was many times more complex.
- Removing unneeded components did little to address this, and AOCE and the other Apple technology du jour, QuickDraw GX, typically could not be run together because of a lack of memory.
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