• DocumentCode
    1319647
  • Title

    Douglas Carl Engelbart: developing the underlying concepts for contemporary computing

  • Author

    Barnes, Susan B.

  • Author_Institution
    Fordham Univ., Bronx, NY, USA
  • Volume
    19
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    1997
  • Firstpage
    16
  • Lastpage
    26
  • Abstract
    Currently, the World Wide Web is the hottest topic in contemporary computing and popular culture. The Web´s meteoric rise is difficult to escape notice. Web stories are plastered in the popular press, and advertisements now include cryptic strings of letters starting with “http://”, but what is missing from the current commercial descriptions of the Web is a discussion about the 30-year history of research and development that created the underlying technologies on which the Web is based. Much of this foundation was laid in the 1960s by Douglas Carl Engelbart. In 1968, at the ACM/IEEE-CS Fall Joint Computer Conference, Engelbart demonstrated his concept of “interactive computing” to a group of computer scientists, and this is now considered a seminal event in the history of computing. The technologies Engelbart originally presented included: windowed screen design, the user interface, hypertextual linking of documents, the mouse, collaborative computing and multimedia. His pioneering work in the 1960s influenced future generations of computer designers and developers. Almost 30 years after Engelbart´s initial demonstration, many of his pioneering visions are now commonly found in personal computers and the developing World Wide Web
  • Keywords
    Internet; groupware; history; hypermedia; interactive systems; microcomputer applications; mouse controllers (computers); multimedia computing; user interfaces; ACM/IEEE-CS Fall Joint Computer Conference; Douglas Carl Engelbart; World Wide Web; collaborative computing; contemporary computing; history; hypertextual document linking; interactive computing; mouse; multimedia; personal computers; popular culture; research and development; user interface; windowed screen design; Collaborative work; Computer interfaces; History; Joining processes; Mice; Microcomputers; Multimedia computing; Research and development; User interfaces; Web sites;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Annals of the History of Computing, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1058-6180
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/85.601730
  • Filename
    601730