The Mouse Turns 40
Smivs writes with an excerpt from the BBC marking the anniversary of what may be the most famous tech demo outside Trinity site: "The humble computer mouse celebrates its 40th anniversary today. On 9 December 1968 hi-tech visionary Douglas Engelbart first used one to demonstrate novel ways of working with computers.
The first mouse that Dr Engelbart used in the demo at the Fall Joint Computer Conference (FJCC) was made of wood and had one button.
Much of the technology shown off in the demo inspired the creation of the hardware and software now widely used. ...
The mouse, which was built by Bill English, helped Dr Engelbart demonstrate how text files could be clipped, copied and pasted as well as showing ways of using computer networks to collaborate on projects or co-edit documents." According to the article, "A day of celebration is planned in California to mark the 40th anniversary; with many of the researchers behind the original demo reunited to mark the event."
We're rejoicing over an input device?
No keyboard monument? Or was it overshadowed by the typewriter?
I'm a satanic clam.
The mouse was seen at the local Maserati dealership evaluating cars with his 20-something year old girlfriend.
Who gives a shit about petty US politics?
Oh come on, we already have a special event for when an Illinois politician gets busted for corruption...we call it "Tuesday".
One button. You have to take your hand off the keyboard. Lame.
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What was amazing wasn't just that he unveiled the mouse, but pretty much launched the concept of personal computing as we know it today, including many of the metaphors we take for granted in the modern graphical OS, as well as video communications, email, hypertext... amazing scenes.
No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
Aw, and it doesn't look a day over 30.
Except it lost its ball. Pretty sad to lose a ball while you're in your prime.
Developers: We can use your help.
Dude, this is Slashdot. We don't use freakin mice around here. Keyboards are always faster
<CTRL+L>javascript:document.getElementById('Submit').click()
And lets be clear. The plural of computer mouse is most definitely not 'computer mouses'.
What? They have copied the "one button mouse" idea from Apple!! Damn Copycats!! Thats why Apple needed to invent the Mighty Mouse so there would not be so many copies!
As a tool, computers with the mouse, particularly the WIMP interface, really revolutionized the game. For some things, like repetitive data entry into vertical business apps, I believe the mouse has not contributed to simplicity. It has allowed a user to perform more tasks in such apps, but that complications has been a mixed blessing. And the over complicated mouse, with 20 buttons, and 3D motions, make me craze the old days of the command line, particalarly an intelligent command line like DEC had.
"She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
This was invented by Shampoo.
(what's happening. How do I get out of this)
This story: How to clean your mouse This memo is from an unnamed computer company. It went to all field engineers about a computer peripheral problem. The author of this memo was quite serious. The engineers rolled on the floor. "Mouse balls are now available as FRU (Field Replacement Unit). Therefore, if a mouse fails to operate or should it perform erratically, it may need a ball replacement. Because of the delicate nature of this procedure, properly trained personnel should only attempt replacement of mouse balls. Before proceeding, determine the type of mouse balls by examining the underside of the mouse. Domestic balls will be larger and harder than foreign balls. Ball removal procedures differ depending upon the manufacturer of the mouse. Foreign balls can be replaced using the pop-off method. Domestic balls are replaced by using the twist-off method. Mouse balls are not usually static sensitive. However, excessive handling can result in sudden discharge. Upon completion of ball replacement, the mouse may be used immediately. It is recommended that each replacer have a pair of spare balls for maintaining optimum customer satisfaction. Any customer missing his balls should suspect local personnel of removing these necessary items."
The Governor of Illinois has been arrested on charges of selling a senatorship to the highest bidder and we're celebrating the birthday of a fucking mouse?
1.) Not everybody is reading this story from Illinois.
2.) The mouse has already survived longer than this scandal has any hopes of being remembered.
3.) What are we supposed to do, collectively worry about what this guy has already done?
We're not Borg and you're not superior for having a spaz attack over it.
"I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)
But how old is Donald Duck and Goofy? ;)
Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
... cleaning mouse balls jokes turn 39.
I had a good laugh at the photo caption: "The basic workings of a mouse have changed little in 40 years".
The way I remember it, the mouse progressed from two perpendicular wheels on the bottom, to a ball that drove two internal wheels with an optical encoder. to optical mice using a reflective pad. to optical mice using surface image capture. And that's not to mention the mouse-like devices in between (trackpoint, touch pads, trackballs...) and permutations of mouse features (wireless, multiple buttons, scroll wheels). Saying that the mouse has changed little is like saying that TVs have changed little in 40 years.
Also, I never implied that everyone doesn't care nor did I imply that everyone does care.
So you are saying that percentage that do care is not 0 or 100 but rather somewhere in between. That's a bold statement, but one I think I agree with.
echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
Holy shit. This guy is right! How naive we've been! We've been reading news about technology on a technology focused website while this whole time our technology news site should have been posting items that have nothing to do with technology! What kind of crazy mixed up world is this!?!
I knew I'd get it right eventually!!!!
Computer screens as we know them, did not start becoming generally available until the mid 1970s. The breakthrough was an inexpensive memory chip large enough to hold 5 by 7 patterns of ascii characters 5 x 7 x 40 (1400 bits) and 80 x 48 screenfull of characters (19K at 6 bits per character). A bit of memory cost about $1 until Intel introduced the first kilobyte chips in 1970 (two years after Englebert's demo) dropping the bit price to pennies in mid 1970s. Then it became practical to sell character computer terminals. Before then computer users used punchcards, punchtapes, teletypes, and line printers.
These were character screens however. Graphics screens took another 10-15 to become personal. The first generation were programmable oscilloscopes, i.e. vector drawing machines. They had their special graphics languages, e.g. GKS, that emulated pen plotters. Limited bit map grapics came in the meantime. Steve Wozniak is famous for one baroque scheme of graphics in the Apple II. It wasnt pure bitmap as we know today. Xerox PARC sold the first B&W bitmaps at $30K a pop ($120K in 2008$). Then about 1980s the first general purpose color raster screen computers came out. At $30K a terminal these were shared in a lab. That was because a megabyte still cost $10K. Finally as memory prices dropped "workstation"-class computers came out around 1985 giving each scientist their personal graphics screen. This was SUN Microsystems original product.
In 2008 I bought a $7 cellphone with 64K pixel color graphics screen.
"Computer, Computer?" "Hello Computer" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=19BWJQ8kjrw
The original presentation was called "A research center for augmenting human intellect" but the end result of his research is myspace.com.
It appears that he is still alive today - perhaps somebody should ask him what he feels about causing this much pain, suffering, and scourge to be released on mankind?
I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
He's getting rather old but he's a good mouse.
Squirrel!
Does anyone else dislike when the pressure spots on the side of the mouse are buttons? Maybe I'm just old, but thats how I move the mouse around (pinch between thumb and ring finger - use index and middle for left and right) ... and I always end up getting extraneous clicks when the sides are buttons. I'd turn this off on my own PC, but its when I use a customer's PC on site. erg.
meh
.... seriously why use the mouse? Ratpoison offers the user a GUI without being slowed down by reaching for the mouse.
Oh come on, we already have a special event for when an Illinois politician gets busted for corruption...we call it "Tuesday".
I thought it used to be called "Daley?"
Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
SMS is hardly encouraging spelling the way things are said, its encouraging a shorthand form of speech with its own conventions and fashions that will differ from area to area, if not person to person. Its encouraging people to create their own spellings in a sea of pure anarchy.
English spelling may be completely inconsistent, and I am sure its really a bitch to learn English as a second language in the written form (although I bet spoken English isn't as bad overall as some languages with much more rigid rules on declensions etc), but the SMS users who are creating their own spellings are more properly playing with spellings. Its really more akin to the spelling of English prior to the first dictionaries when a writer might spell the same word several different ways inside of the same document and there were *no* official correct spellings.
The problem with non-standardized spellings based on an individual's pronunciation of an English word is the wide variety of English dialects spoken all over the world, and for that matter the large number of speakers who have it as a second language, and whose pronunciation is of course coloured by their native language and subsequent accent when speaking English. What you decide to use as an SMS abbreviation of a word when you come from Manchester England for instance, might make zero sense to me when I am from Western Canada, or to a third person living in Mumbai.
Now, the current standardized spellings for English (which can be divided into 1)the US spelling, and 2) the rest of the world's spelling), are really horrid and I am sure they are a major barrier to learning English for million of people in the rest of the world, but at least they are more or less conventions which are consistent. Any spelling reform almost has to come as an initiative based on the universal adoption of a particular dialect of English.
Although I live in Canada, speak and write the Queen's English (and thus spell the US word "color" as "colour" etc), my candidate for the eventually dominant form of English is the English language as defined by the speakers of Seattle - why? Because Microsoft Word's spell checker is using US English and I expect that to dominate eventually (yes, you can switch to other versions of English which presumably switches the spell checker as well, but the default is US English). Plus of course, US Culture is currently bombarding the rest of the world like it or not.
If the US decided to radically reform the official spelling of English and taught the new spelling in schools, its possible the rest of the world would eventually adopt it. The problem is course that all old documents would then be rendered unreadable by the next generation. I doubt that is likely to happen, so I think we are stuck with the current horrid orthography for the foreseeable future :P
"The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
... sort of ... : http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=98/12/09/139241
Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
The mouse was invented in 1964, NOT 1968 http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101041011/nextessay.html
We're already seeing the touchscreen come into its own with the iPod Touch and other similar devices. I would imagine we are probably moving towards simplified interfaces, such as touch or voice command. Soon, I think, computers with keyboards will become somewhat rare outside of the workforce. Keyboard and mouse is just not that efficient for what most people do with computers.
Of course not. It was Al Gore.
What if the Hokey Pokey really is what it's all about?
I don't know if these are free enough for you, but there is a 192MB AVI file you can download and a Google video with the usual advantages and limitations.
On a side note: THE Mouse turns 80 (Mickey Mouse, that is). The title of the article doesn't specify which mouse... :-p
In summary: We hate F#$@ing Illinois Nazis
- There is no point, it's like a sphere -
The Commodore Amiga had been using right button menus since 1986.
The right mouse button brought up menus on the Alto at Xerox PARC.
"... was made of wood and had one button..."
isn't that what apple's still use? ;-)
Or have they finally decided to move to the 'new' bronze-age mice ... made of bronze?
Heaven forbid they admit anything-PC is right and move to a plastic mouse, or more buttons, wheels, etc...
ok, apple fan-boys, whack away now. I'll be here busily ignoring you...