Article on Inventor of the Mouse 44
Karim sent us a link
to a sweet little article on
Douglas
Engelbart, best known as being the who
invented that mouse thing that has completely changed the landscape of the
computing world. The article is interesting- about research,
and finance, and the industry as a whole. Worth a read.
Will 3-button mice ever be accepted by non-techs? (Score:1)
I use a 3 button mouse with X. No problem for me.
However, as Linux tries to embrace the non-tech crowd with user friendly desktops such as Gnome and Kde, will the Mac/MS crowd switch to a 3 button mouse?
I know that Linux gives you a config choice between 2 and 3 button mice, but I can't help but feel that the apps are being written skewed toward 3 button, which the non-techs might not use. This might make the apps less useful because they've been optimised for 3 button, instead of the 2 button these people might prefer.
What do you folks think?
Nice article - a bit of history (Score:1)
"We'd been using electronic mail since 1970 [over the government-backed ARPA network, predecessor to the Internet]. But both Apple and Microsoft Corp. ignored the network."
Nice to see proper perspective. Not to bash anyone in particular, but I sometimes get fed up with the historical revisionism that takes place in the "meida" nowadays. If you don't know what and how stuff happened, folks can tell you anything and sell it as truth.
But is he really the inventor of the mouse? (Score:1)
Doug Engelbart invented the two-wheel mechanical mouse, the kind that has two conical
wheels underneat, that you can see with old DEC terminals and workstations. Both inventions where made roughly at the same time, and both
devices look and behave crudely like the mice we use today... but
neither of them invented the mouse that has a rubber-coated steel ball that we use today.
Both people invented mouse-like devices, and called their invention "x-y position indicator".
The mouse is good? (Score:1)
used the simple argument that it does not have to be picked up to be used.
He/she didn't suggest that we all use CLI (Score:1)
I just wanted to mention that I am posting this from lynx...
An interesting article (Score:2)
Douglas Engelbart
Dec. 9, 1968
---
Great article. Apparently, he pulled off what is known as "The Mother Of All Demos", basically demonstrating Internet Groupware in the late 60's. Exceedingly cool.
I read this guy with great interest. He comes up with all this incredibly useful and usable stuff, and turns around and holds disdain for user friendlyness--he says people are unwilling to learn stuff and it's causing them to use less efficient tools. Where I think the true problems lie in the fact that user friendliness intersects with maximum efficiency only at great research expense to the designers of the hardware or software--in other words, it's easy to be efficient and hard, and it's easy to be inefficient and easy, but it's hard to be efficient and easy.
Working so hard on UI stuff(I'm leading a BOF at LinuxWorldExpo!
Yours Truly,
Dan Kaminsky
DoxPara Research
http://doxpara.netpedia.net
Once you pull the pin, Mr. Grenade is no longer your friend.
An interesting article (Score:1)
Great fun to watch, doug gets a big gasp from the audience when he shows them that his keyboard is actually "not built into the computer", he can "pick it up and put it on his lap, and move around", and the audience was gobsmacked
Doug showed them his mouse, and then showed them his other invention, which was the chord keyboard, supposedly he was always a bit upset that it wasn't as much of a success as the mouse
He does this video link up as well, which wowed the audience, and showed them two users, himself and his research assistent who teleoperates a mouse pointer of his own at the same time on the shared screen, one of the first proper Computer Supported Cooperative Work demos as well. All very heavy stuff, the mouse cursor looks very funny, its basically an ink blob moving about the place, Doug also demoed a form of hypertexted document as well, just while he was at everything else :-), the bitmapped display he was using (dont know how new bitmapped displays would have been to his audience) is a bit wierd as well, the font he was using looks really like something he threw together for an afternoon. I dont know the cost of the demo, but it was reportedly incredibly high, what im still interested in knowing, is how much of the demo was semi-faked :-), and how careful was doug to avoid functionality that would have crashed the whole thing, he must have been sweating heavily with so many new and cutting edge pieces of software and hardware functioning at the same time.
Anyhow if you get a chance to see the video, do so, i found the audience reactions hilarious.
C.
Will 3-button mice ever be accepted by non-techs? (Score:1)
Will 3-button mice ever be accepted by non-techs? (Score:1)
the instant I find a 3 button mouse with a "grab" button on its side I'll buy it tho
---
the Gods have a sense of humor,
Kinda cool (Score:1)
Kinda interesting... I wish I made the mouse.
But I dunno if it's as truly interesting as Jujunem [angelfire.com] Whaddya think?
The mouse is The beginning of the end (Score:1)
The mouse is directly responsible for the following SHIT:
Macintosh.
Windows.
X.
The mouse gave Fucking Stupid People the ability to use the computer, therefore the mouse is responisible for the following SHIT:
AOL (Where would they be without their stupid users)
Microsoft (As Above)
SPAM
ICQ
etc.
The ONLY benifit I see from the use of the mouse would be the great improvement it gave for the control of QUAKE, however, DOOM, DOOM2, Duke3D, and the origional (BEST) WOLFINSTIEN 3D survived without it, besides a new kind of device like the old nintendo glove probably would've been designed for computer games if the mouse hadn't already taken it's stranglehold (monopoly? *grin*) of the market.
YEAH!! GO THE CONSOLE BASED OS's AND GAMES
PC-DOS
*NIX
DR-DOS
DOOM
DOOM2
DUKE3D
WOLF3D
SHADOW WARRIER
8 bits it a BYTE (Score:1)
1 is a bit
01010101 is a BYTE
If your modem is capable of 33600bps you can recieve 33600 1s or 0s in a second.
Each characture is 8 bits.
The mouse is good!! (Score:1)
Most games benefit from using a mouse. I admit I use the keyboard a lot in windowing interfaces, but anyone who thinks grep and cat are more intuitive than a scrollbar and a double-click is a lunatic.
Missing word in post (Score:1)
> to a sweet little article on Douglas Engelbart, best knows as being the who invented that mouse
Shouldn't that be 'the _person_ who invented that invented'?
The mouse is good? (Score:1)
The mouse is an invention in the same sense that Windows is an invention. Sure, it does have some nice things, but I'll take an IBM 3101 over your Windows 95 PC with a mouse anyday! (OK, so I'd probably want something better than a 3101...)
Cheers,
Joshua. (Who does like his Microsoft scrollpoint mouse.)
Nice article... nearly right (Score:1)
Also, regarding Apple ignoring the network: I find that claim to be absurd, since even the first 1984 Mac had 57kbps serial networking built in. It merely lacked a TCP/IP stack, but then even in the late '80s there was a raging debate over which competing transport protocol would win out. Remember X.25, Bitnet and UUCP? DECnet? Anyone want to recall another?
Clever of you not to specify which is better (Score:1)
Since I am intimately familiar with these four items, I can't help but jump in with $0.02. I find GUI to be 10x more productive than CLI 99% of the time. Similarly for Word and TeX (or even LaTeX). For that remaining 1% of the time, I prefer to have a "mini environment" that lets me revert to the old-fashioned way.
Of course, even the old way gets better and better. I now use PERL almost exclusively instead of any shell language - even (especially!) in a Windows environment. But in the end, the new paradigm improves productivity so much, it stands on its own merit even without a path to the past.
But is he really the inventor of the mouse? (Score:1)
Engelbart's device had two perpendicular wheels.
Cheap chord-writer (Score:1)
Keyboards are damn cheap, and this guy has some good ideas. His chord-writer should be worth a try.
Anybody know where to find the info on what the different chords indicated?
I'm not going to wait around until M$ invents the Intelli-key. I want it now.
mouse+thingy (Score:1)
Anyway, why not combine it _with_ the mouse
a 5 button programable mouse
(one in each hand gives yall two railguns @ a time)
Don't any of you sons'a'bitches go and make any money off this. It's MY idea. MINE!
(c) and stuff.
Where can I get the video? (Score:1)
$125
The mouse is good? (Score:1)
Chord keyboard available? (Score:1)
--
I agree more with Doug (Score:1)
"Okay, turn right...NOW! A little more! Speed up to 45...stop!"
What he's talking about is putting on a false layer of abstraction that doesn't really help the user become effective at the task. However, he's not advocating that we all use command line interfaces and TeX. If you're only going to do something a few times, it's not worth learning it. Engelbart is really advocating that you use the right tool and have the right training for your task. If that is a CLI, then that's fine. But it's not for everybody.
The mouse is good? (Score:1)
Remember: Use the right tool for the task! There is no one single "perfect" interface. Engelbart's team investigated dozens of devices for input. The mouse was simply the one that made it out.