In 1995, active support for Garnet at CMU was dropped as key people moved on and development focus shifted.
			  The toolkit itself, however, is quite feature complete and stable.  It's features include:
			  * Toolkit intrinsics:
  			 - A custom object-oriented programming system which uses a
	   			prototype-instance model. 
  			 - A graphics layer that hides the differences between X/11 and Macintosh.
  			 - Automatic constraint maintenance: so properties of objects can depend on
	   			properties of other objects, and be automatically re-evaluated
	   			when the other objects change.  The constraints can be
	   			arbitrary lisp expressions.
  			 - Built-in, high-level input event handling.
  			 - Support for gesture recognition
  			 - Widgets for multi-font, multi-line, mouse-driven text editing.
  			 - Optional automatic layout of application data into lists, tables, trees,
	   			or graphs.
  			 - Automatic generation of PostScript for printing.
 			 - Support for large-scale applications and data visualization.
			* Two complete widget sets:
			   - One with a Motif look and feel implemented in Lisp, and one with
				   a custom look and feel.
			* Interactive design tools for creating parts of the interface without
	   			writing code:
			   - Gilt interface builder for creating dialog boxes
			   - Lapidary interactive tool for creating new widgets and for
	   			drawing application-specific objects.
			   - C32 spreadsheet system for specifying complex constraints.