1986
• Ventura Publisher is the first desktop publishing application on the IBM PC. The software runs on an (included) operating system called GEM. The application turns out to be a survivor, currently still being marketed by Corel as shareware.
• The extra memory (1 MB), SCSI port and larger 800K disk drive make the Macintosh Plus a capable performer. It is the earliest Mac I ever worked with but I actually like the powerful SE/30 model (1989) more.

• The Radius Full Page Display is the first external large screen that can be driven by a Mac Plus. The display can be used in parallel with the existing screen, allowing users to drag windows from one monitor to the other. Microsoft finally adds this feature to its operating systems as well in Windows 98, twelve years later.
• Microtek launched its first 300 dpi B&W desktop scanner in 1985. The Agfa Focus scanner ships around the same time but offers a 6-bit greyscale mode as well. Later versions offer 8-bit greyscale (the Focus II shown below) and color support.

• Peter Deutsch writes Ghostscript, a freeware PostScript interpreter. Nowadays this product is still the basis for many entry-level RIPs that drive proofers or printers.
• 5500 employees of News International go on strike in a dispute over new working conditions and the proposed move from Fleet Street to new premises in the London Docklands. Despite a long and bitter battle between the strikers and the police, The Times, the Sunday Times, The Sun, and the News of the World get published every single day. This Wapping dispute is a key event in the development of the British newspaper industry.
• Compaq launches the $6499 DeskPro 386, the first system to use Intel’s 32-bit 80386 CPU. From this moment on, IBM no longer sets the rules in the PC world.