"As much as possible, to boost mankind's collective capability for coping with complex, urgent problems."  0A

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Bootstrap Institute logo Doug Engelbart's
   Colloquium at Stanford
An In-Depth Look at "The Unfinished Revolution"

Welcome to the home page for the Doug Engelbart's Colloquium 2000

April 2000
The unfinished revolution,
strategy and means for coping with complex problems  1A

   Doug lecturing at Colloquium
Engelbart at the 2000 Colloquium
"An In-Depth Look at the Unfinished Revolution"
(see program and watch video)
   Doug lecturing at Colloquium
Engelbart at the 1998 Symposium
"Engelbart's Unfinished Revolution"
(read more and watch video)

Tangibles and intangibles  2

The Engelbart Colloquium, held at Stanford University Winter Quarter 2000, is titled "An In-Depth Look at The Unfinished Revolution", also known as "The Unfinished Revolution - II" or "Unrev-II".

Inspiration for this Colloquium: Unlike its forerunner, a 1998 symposium named the "The Unfinished Revolution," which marked the 30th anniversary of Engelbart's 1968 "Mother of All Demos", the real thrust of this 2000 Colloquium is an overarching personal commitment. "It is forty-nine years ago," Dr. Engelbart reminisced at the outset of the first lecture, "that I, in some wild moment, committed my professional career to seeing how much I could maximize my career's contribution toward this thing of helping humankind's collective ability for coping with complex, urgent problems."  2A

Courtesy Stanford LibrariesThe tangible components of Engelbart's productivity are a string of inventions -- the computer mouse, display editing, outline processing, multiple remote online users of a networked processor, hyperlinking and in-file object processing, multiple windows, hypermedia, context-sensitive help. These are very much up front in the 1998 symposium. A site maintained by Stanford University provides a rich documentary about that event along with links to various points of interest that in words and pictures demonstrate Engelbart's contribution to computing and, hence, to our life as now we know it. Try to imagine personal computing without his inventions, is the question asked. For more background and links to the Stanford video archives of the 1998 symposium, see Celebrating the 30th Anniversary.  2B

This Colloquium: This site is at once a companion piece and an extension of Stanford's Center for Professional Development web pages devoted to the Colloquium, the Unfinished Revolution Part II, or "UnRev-II" for short. Its pages, which can be reached through the above menu bar, are not intended to be a capstone on the past, they are intended as an invitation to participate in an ongoing continuum of inventiveness for the good of humankind, to work toward more fully realizing ideas that have been on Engelbart's mind for decades, but still haven't yet sufficiently caught on  to bear still more copious fruit for the benefit of all. These pages concern that very lifetime pursuit: a strategy and means for the executing that strategy, which is to, as much as possible, boost humankind's collective capability for coping with the world's complex, urgent problems.  2C

Engelbart's experiential basis for this pursuit lies mostly within industry -- so much so that there is a strong tendency to perceive of his strategy as fundamentally an industrial management strategy. That is a mistake. It really is a strategy for all sorts of complex endeavors in which people need to work together, a strategy for all sorts of "social organisms," with the ultimate ones being global initiatives, representative of all peoples populating one shared habitat. See also Doug's Vision Highlights.  2D

For online viewers  3

All ten three-hour colloquium sessions conducted by Engelbart and his more than 30 guests were webcast live.  These sessions were recorded also for later viewing and transcription. You can watch all ten Colloquium sessions online at the Stanford Center for Professional Development website.  3E

The sessions may also be followed from transcripts, separately or concurrently with the webcasts. And interested parties were invited to join the ongoing online discussions which mainly focused on work to further enhance the augmenting of human intellect with computers. [vE].  3F

People who should be especially interested  4

  • Leaders of government (all levels: local, state, federal, other; countries, and the U.N.), institutions (education, health, research, etc.), professional societies and consortia.  4A
  • Business executives and managers concerned with transformation strategies, and with the potential and dynamics of collaborative processes and the technologies which support them.  4B
  • General public interested in collaborative processes and knowledge management, and/or in the history and future development of information technology.  4C
  • Academics who are studying the history and sociology of information technology, the nature of societal or organizational transformation, and/or the collaborative process.  4D
  • Technology developers who are designing for future organizations, teams and communities.  4E
  • Consultants who are designing services for future organizations, teams and communities.  4F

Sponsors  5

This colloquium was made possible through private donations by Pierluigi Zappacosta, Dan Lynch, Sun Microsystems, and through the hard work of many volunteers who have contributed their time and effort.  5A

Imagine what we can accomplish together
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Above space serves to put hyperlinked targets at the top of the window
December 1, 2000
Stanford University is webcasting Engelbart's Unrev-II Colloquium also in close-captioned format. Reception required not only MS Windows, but MS Explorer as well. You can watch all ten sessions online  10

May 27, 2000
While work on the Colloquium transcripts is in progress, one will find unedited versions, unverified versions and final versions. A transcripts is labeled unverified when the edited text is yet to be checked against the original, spoken word.  10A

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"Brain on network" is reproduced here courtesy of Stanford Libraries