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In response, Apple released a blizzard of marketing materials in 1989 trumpeting Apple's advantage, the OASIS Model. OASIS, which stands for Open Architecture System Integration Strategy, was supposed to be the philosophy behind the Mac, as if this had existed from the start. In the documents they outlined the problems with grafting a GUI on top of an existing operating system, and showed how the Mac's "all in one" design allowed Apple to produce a much cleaner system.
OASIS was essentially the little red book for the Mac-using community, an effort to rally the users around a single vision. In this respect it was a failure, as it seemed to many that it was an attempt to fend off competition (which it was), and thus made the company look somewhat desperate. OASIS marketting basically disassapeared with the release of System 7 in 1990, and was not seen again.