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Stanford Mouse Video Archive

serutan writes "Stanford University has a retro-cool series of video clips of a 1968 presentation that foreshadowed the Internet and marked the public debut of the mouse. It is a surreal, weirdly captivating piece of computer history." Part of the site includes a solicitation for those who have memories and stories about the old days of computing, when programs were measured in inches and people felt they were lucky, lucky I tell you, to have ones and zeros.

5 of 140 comments (clear)

  1. Mac users should be ashamed... by codexus · · Score: 5, Funny

    even the first mouse had 3 buttons! ;)

    --
    True warriors use the Klingon Google
  2. The slashdotting rules for this story by Spackler · · Score: 5, Funny

    If you were not born when this event took place (1968) please step aside and wait until tomorrow to view the site. This way, us older nerds with the short memories can have a chance at it.

    Younger folks who actually programmed a PDP-anything also can have a quick look.

  3. repost by joshwa · · Score: 4, Funny

    *sigh* ...

    British Telecom, Hyperlinking And Mr. Englebart Slashdot, 28 Sep 2000

  4. So Xerox stole thier ideas from these guys??? by JohnDenver · · Score: 3, Funny

    * Microsoft rips off Apple
    * Apple rips off Xerox
    * Xerox rips off Stanford's Augmentation Research Center

    Who did Stanford's Augmentation Research Center rip off?

    --
    "Communism is like having one [local] phone company " - Lenny Bruce
  5. It's not that it's closed source... by Pope+Slackman · · Score: 3, Funny

    I don't really mind closed source.
    Hell, my desktop OS is Windows.

    I never install Real because it's an ugly, ad-laden, untrustworthy piece of spyware crap.

    Besides, I'd rather have files I can download, because streaming...[buffering (10%)]...in any...[buffering(15%)]...format...[buffering(20%)] ...sucks...[buffering(35%)]...my...[buffering(50%) ]...arse.

    And as for MS being an illegal monopoly, I'll just say I think Be's argument is much more valid than Netscape's, because unlike Netscape, Be's flagship product didn't suck.

    C-X C-S