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Who made Copy Paste and Cut easy to use today?

Larry Tesler is a computer scientist who created "Cut, Copy & Paste" and died at the age of 74 on January 20. 2020, but he is known as the creator of the first Cut, Copy and Paste function and left to users today.

Larry Tesler was born in 1945 in New York, USA. Larry Tesler began working in Silicon Valley during the early 1960s. He is a well-known computer scientist who has worked for several large US companies such as Xerox PARC, Apple, Amazon, and Yahoo. . He is a New York native who studied computer science at Stanford University in California.

In 1973, he joined PARC, which is when he developed the Cut, Copy and Paste functions. Launched consistently on both text editors as well as on the entire computer system.

He is also a former employee of Apple, in 1997 to participate in the development of a number of products, such as Macintosh, QuickTime, Lisa and Newton Tablet, and then Copy & Paste function already running on those computers as well.

Xerox in the United States, where Tesler spent part of his career, also paid tribute to him on the day of his death. The company wrote on its Twitter account: 

"We respect the creators of Cut, Copy & Past, and many more are former Xerox researcher Larry Tesler. Today, because of his revolutionary ideas.

Recalling many of his major accomplishments, in addition to being a key figure at Apple, who played a key role in the development of work products at Stanford's AI lab, including many, he became an impressive figure. In the history of computers from the past to the present.


And the work that everyone will never forget is the work of creating Copy Paste and Cut function on the computer, this function was first installed on Apple software on the Lisa computer in 1983 and later. It has been distributed to all categories since then.

Sadly, many years later, Tesler was pronounced dead at the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC), his latest unit, on Monday, February 16th. 2020 at the age of 74, which is a sad day for one of the most talented figures in computer history. 

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