Bill Atkinson, Who Made Computers Easier to Use, Is Dead at 74

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Technology|Bill Atkinson, Who Made Computers Easier to Use, Is Dead at 74

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/07/technology/bill-atkinson-dead.html

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A designer for Apple, he created software that made it possible to display shapes, images and text on the screen and present a simulated “desktop.”

A man wearing a patterned button-up shirt gestures toward an Apple Computer in low lighting.
Bill Atkinson in 1987. Among other things, he is credited with inventing computer screen “pull down” menus and the “double-click” gesture of a mouse.Credit...Michel Baret/Gamma-Rapho, via Getty

John Markoff

June 7, 2025, 5:50 p.m. ET

Bill Atkinson, the Apple Computer designer who created the software that enabled the transformative visual approach pioneered by the company’s Lisa and Macintosh computers, making the machines accessible to millions of users without specialized skills, died on Thursday night at his home in Portola Valley, Calif., in the San Francisco Bay Area. He was 74.

In a Facebook post, his family said the cause was pancreatic cancer.

It was Mr. Atkinson who programmed QuickDraw, a foundational software layer used for both the Lisa and Macintosh computers; composed of a library of small programs, it made it possible to display shapes, text and images on the screen efficiently.

The QuickDraw programs were embedded in the computers’ hardware, providing a distinctive graphical user interface that presented a simulated “desktop,” displaying icons of folders, files and application programs.

Mr. Atkinson is credited with inventing many of the key aspects of graphical computing, such as “pull down” menus and the “double-click” gesture, which allows users to open files, folders and applications by clicking a mouse button twice in succession.

Before the Macintosh was introduced in January 1984, most personal computers were text-oriented; graphics were not yet an integrated function of the machines. And computer mice pointing devices were not widely available; software programs were instead controlled by typing arcane commands.

The QuickDraw library had originally been designed for Apple’s Lisa computer, which was introduced in January 1983. Intended for business users, the Lisa predated many of the Macintosh’s easy-to-use features, but priced at $10,000 (almost $33,000 in today’s money), it was a commercial failure.


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