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.
The page linked is, of course, the one from BT's hyperlink patent story we discussed recently. One of the videos on the site demonstrates the use of that very thing.
"I Know You Are But What Am I?"
even the first mouse had 3 buttons! ;)
True warriors use the Klingon Google
And why can't we have these clips in MPEG or something that everybody can see?
-- PC architecture - what a mess.
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.
*sigh* ...
British Telecom, Hyperlinking And Mr. Englebart Slashdot, 28 Sep 2000
"Doug demonstrates working with a graphic file tagged with hyperlinked items. Clicking on a link in the graphic, Doug jumps to separate items, such as texts, linked to the graphic."
We call this Prior Art.
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I do believe the original prototype is still on display at The Tech Museum of Innovation, San Jose, CA.
It's encased in a transparent plastic box and you can actually pick it up and study it at close. I was lucky enough to get a couple of snapshots of it.
Get a glimpse here.
naah sig schmig
Predating all of these was the sliding crank used as a target designator in the Nike missile system. This was a 2 degree of freedom crank; you could turn the crank, or slide the handle radially. This device is not well known, but can be seen at the restored launch site in Marin County, CA. The guidance computer for the Nike was an analog system, not a digital computer, though.