Our illustrious leader forwarded me the info on
this event. It's the 40th anniversary of the
Mother of all Demos. The event is in Stanford's memorial auditorium on December 9. We'll sooooo be there.
It's
about as geeky an anniversary as one could possibly hope to have. In
1968, Douglas Engelbart showcased the research work that had taken
place in the Augmentation Research Center at Stanford Research
Institute. That meant showing off the world's first modern computing
environment. It's where the world first saw the mouse, windowed work
spaces, networked computing, and even hypertext. There will never be a
more influential computing demonstration.
Historically, Xerox
PARC gets the credit for inventing a lot of this stuff. Perhaps it
would be more accurate to say that Xerox PARC perfected the ideas first
shown here. Of course, the lines between the two organizations became
extremely blurry as former ARC folk became PARC folk during the 70's.
Note the 5-button keyboard-pad Engelbart uses in the demo. Standard
issue with an Alto.

On a personal note,
Bill English will be on hand to speak about the demo. I met Bill many years ago at the
ACCRC,
where he'd dropped in to recycle some computers. After we spoke for a
half hour or so, and I gave him a tour of the facilities, he hinted
that he'd been something of a technology visionary himself, back in the
day.
I asked what he'd done in his youth. He told me he had
built the first mouse. Forget Bill Gates and Steve Jobs. Without Bill
English and the guys at Stanford ARC, we'd all be using light pens. Ick.
Enough rambling! What good is a demo without a video. Watch the Engelbart demo below. And remember, this was all done in 1968!