You might have heard of Doug Engelbart, and you might know him as the inventor of the computer
mouse. But you probably don't know that he is one of the most influential computer visionaries of
all time.
In the 1960s he and his colleagues were playing with concepts and designing systems that today we
take for granted: visual interfaces, spreadsheets, email, and much, much more.
I had the great privilege of interviewing Mr Engelbart more than 3 years ago. I was at an event
at Xerox PARC, a promotion for a book by New York Times journalist John Markoff "What the
Dormouse Said: How the Sixties Counterculture Shaped the Personal Computer Industry."
The event featured a lot of early computer pioneers and many of them spoke about how they got
inspired to work on computer design and systems development. Each one spoke about seeing a
seminal demo by Doug Engelbart and how it changed their lives!
Some hadn't been at the demo but heard about it from others, and it still changed their lives! I
was amazed at these stories, amazed that a demo could change people's lives, and amazed at the
man behind the stories.
I didn't realize at the time that Doug Engelbart is still alive and was sitting just behind me.
After the event I was invited to a local restaurant where there were a few dozen people
celebrating the publication of Mr Markoff's book. I was a little late in arriving and most people
were crowded around Mr Markoff's table. Amazingly, the table with Mr Engelbart was half empty. I
couldn't believe my luck and soon was sitting right next to him, and had an amazing conversation.
You can read the rest here...
A tribute
to one of Silicon Valley's most influential and forgotten researchers
On Monday and Tuesday there is a celebration of Mr Engelbart's ground breaking "mother of
all demos" at the Program for the Future
Conference
It will feature:
- Professor Thomas Malone, Founding Director, MIT Center for
Collective Intelligence
- Professor Hiroshi Ishii, Associate Director, MIT Media Laboratory
-
Peter Norvig, Director of Research, Google
-
Andries van Dam, Professor, Brown University
-
Alan Kay, President, Viewpoints Research Institute
-
Steve Wozniak, co-founder, Apple Computer, Inc.
December 8
- Speakers and Workshops on collective intelligence
at The Tech Museum of Innovation,
201 South Market Street, San José (map).
In keeping with Engelbart's vision of mass collaboration, this event brings together many
communities -- education, business, nonprofit, social, political and technology. The day will end
with a special tour, led by Peter Friess, President of The Tech Museum, through Leonardo: 500 Years into the
Future, the largest exhibition of da Vinci's engineering, anatomical studies and art ever to
visit the United States.
December 9- The morning program at Stanford University's
Wallenberg Hall (map)
is a Call to Action to organize ourselves to move forward to harness the collective intelligence
of our community.
In the afternoon, SRI is celebrating the 40th anniversary of Engelbart's
legendary "mother of all demos" at Stanford's Memorial Auditorium (map).
We hope you will join us for that event as well.
Here is the demo!