Tesseract

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The Tesseract (also known as the Tesseract Personal Computer), is a series of home computer systems manufactured and sold by Harrowing Software. The Tesseract computer is contained within a keyboard, similarly to older 8-bit computers. (It also comes with a mouse.) Tesseract computers are designed to be easy to set up and use. The Tesseract can be used for many of the fundamental PC tasks, including browsing the internet, playing online and offline games, running office software, and online instant messaging and electronic mail. The first model was announced in 1993 and released in 1994, in order to compete with the IBM PC compatible computers and Windows 3.1; and to provide a computer that could rival the capabilities of other new machines, while retaining the form factor and ease of use of older 8-bit home computers.

Software

The Tesseract runs Tesseract OS, a desktop operating system designed similarly to Windows 95. It comes with an internet browser, basic office suite, multimedia software, games, internet communications software (e-mail, IM), and more desktop utilities (calculator, text editor, clock, file manager, etc). Tesseract OS is designed to be easy to use. It does not contain a command line interface, as the entire OS is accessible and usable from the graphical interface. Tesseract OS is intended to run only on Tesseract hardware.

The desktop has a taskbar and desktop icons including a shortcut to the user's home directory, where all of their personal files go, and a shortcut to the My Computer view, which shows connected internal drives and a shortcut to the system settings manager. The desktop also has shortcuts to connected external drives, CD-ROMs, and floppy disks.

The Tesseract comes with Internet WebView, Harrowing Software's own internet browser, which is the default in Tesseract OS. Internet WebView also includes an e-mail client and a web-page composition tool and publishing tool.

Additional software can be bought for the Tesseract in retail stores, in the form of boxed software on CD-ROM or floppy disk. Software designed for the Tesseract will have the computer's logo on the box, similarly to console video games.