December 9, 2008 "Engelbart and the Dawn of Interactive Computing"
was the name given this special commemorative event hosted by SRI International at Stanford University to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Doug Engelbart's now famous 1968 demo – also known as "The Mother of All Demos." It was there at the 1968 Fall Joint Computer Conference that Doug and his team at SRI first presented their seminal work in personal and interactive computing to the world – including the world debut of the mouse, interactive online knowledge work, hypermedia, online collaboration, and more.
This event brought together key members of Engelbart's original team, along with notable visionaries Alan Kay, Andy van Dam, Bob Taylor, John Markoff, Chuck House, Curt Carlson (then President, SRI International), and Master of Ceremonies Robert Sproull (then VP and Fellow, Sun Labs) who along with Alan Kay and Andy van Dam had also attended the 1968 demo.
Watch excerpts below from the panel discussion of Engelbart's original team sharing their behind-the-scenes experiences, take aways, and analysis of the original 1968 demo.
Panel discussion with (left to right) moderator Robert Sproull, original research team members from the demo Don Andrews, Bill English, Bill Paxton, and Jeff Rulifson, and long-time colleague Andy van Dam
[photo courtesy SRI International]
Watch the panel discussion
[ Part I
| Part II
]
Watch Event Highlights
Watch "Engelbart's vision honored by his colleagues" event highlights, by Jack Hubbard and Ryan Roberts, Stanford Report (2008)
SRI International Event Commemorates 40th Anniversary of Seminal Demonstration... International Business Times. December 3,2008. "On that day in 1968 at the Fall Joint Computer Conference in San Francisco, Engelbart and his team in SRI's Augmentation Research Center (ARC)debuted numerous – and now ubiquitous – technology innovations ..."
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