Today, I had the great fortune of
attending the 40th anniversary of the
Mother
of all Demos. It's a slightly meta/hazy event to describe, but here goes:
Tomorrow, December 9, marks the 40th anniversary of a demonstration of ground
breaking work staged on unheard-of equipment designed to expand human
intelligence.
In Valley-speak, it was the
Mother of all
Demos. A bunch of uber-geeks who'd spent the 1960's working on these
new-fangled doohickies called computers showed
off what they'd been dreaming up in their magical workshop. They showed a crowd
of experienced computer nerds inventions they'd never seen before.
Inventions like the mouse. And an
oscilloscope-cum-wordenator we'd now call a
monitor. And, oh, yeah--
video
conferencing. Not to mention the
1000's
of software innovations.
It's not even an event that took place in a
single location. The team at the Stanford Research Institute was every-bit as
involved in the demonstration as the face-men.
Dr. Douglas C. Engelbart and
Bill
English were in San Francisco, on stage showing all this cool gear off, but
behind the scenes, 30 miles south, there were racks of equipment and more brainy
computer men. It's as if Edison had been working in his labs, creating his many
inventions, then brought all of them to bear in a multi-city coordinated stage
show.
This demonstration took place on December 9, 1968 in California. Today
and tomorrow, the
Program for the
Future is taking place.
And therein, I spied
a wild Dr. Engelbart. Amidst the crowds of adoring fans, he humbly
walked,
with a smile that lit up the
world. We have proof of the existence of this giant.
This God among men. This mythical forbearer
from whence all modern computer paradigms derived
Dr. Douglas C.
Engelbart is the true creator of all you see and do on a computer. Over the
years, his small research group at Stanford constantly changed sizes and people,
but always he was there, pushing his vision of computer-augmented work for
humanity.
Dr. Thomas Malone, founding
director of the MIT Center for Collective
Intelligence, put it best, this morning. He said:
When Doug talked about collective intelligence, he didn't just talk
about companies being smarter, he talked about the whole world being smarter.
When you think about our increasingly interconnected world, it's becoming clear
that it's possible, and I believe increasingly useful to reguard our whole
species as a kind of global brain. Which we can hopefully make to be a more
intelligent global brain.
Now that's the kind of computer science
research I can get behind. Hats off to all of the
ARC alums,
and especially to
Douglas Engelbart, a man who
has likely contributed more to the collective evolution of our species than any
other human in history. We truly stand on the shoulders of giants.
For oodles of pictures, check out my
Flickr
feed: