To Honor Doug Engelbart, Who Passed Away Last Night, Please Go Watch His 1968 Demo
from the innovation-at-work dept
On the the 40th anniversary of Doug Engelbart's famous 1968 demo of a personal computer system, we urged everyone to find some time to watch the video of his demo. Now, with the news that Engelbart passed away last night in his sleep, at age 88, we'll once again suggest you find the 100 minutes necessary to rewatch the demo.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: computers, doug engelbart, gui, hyperlinks, innovation, mouse
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Every so often, someone comes along that sees things very differently, and he is an innovator that moves us forward in a big way with huge steps.
There are very few true innovators, he was one of them, and will be missed.
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The talk was given in San Francisco, but the computer he controlled was in Menlo Park.
To put how amazing that was in context: he was hoping that this experimental ARPANET would be running the next year with 12 computers and transmitting at 20kbps.
He was the Edison of the computer age.
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Re:
We do owe Engelbart a debt, though. I wonder if Matthew "The Oatmeal" Inman will set up an Indiegogo fundraiser to set up a statue or something. I'd contribute.
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condolences, but stay out of the Great Man gutter
Maybe very, very, considering the path dependency of computing development, in detail. But so what, would it have been very, very delayed or otherwise worse? I doubt it very much. Independent contemporaneous invention and all that.
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Had a really mega geek moment
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Wonder if
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M i n d
L
O
W
N
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Not his only innovation
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Rest In Peace
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Read this article for a good insight...
http://worrydream.com/Engelbart/
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