词条 | Engelbart, Douglas |
释义 | Engelbart, Douglas American inventor born Jan. 30, 1925, near Portland, Oregon, U.S. American inventor whose work beginning in the 1950s led to his patent for the computer mouse, the development of the basic graphical user interface, and groupware. Engelbart grew up on a farm near Portland. Following two years of enlisted service as a radar technician for the U.S. Navy in World War II, he completed his bachelor's degree in electrical engineering at Oregon State University in 1948. He soon became dissatisfied with his electrical engineering job at the Ames Research Center, located in Moffett Field, California, and in December 1950 had the inspiration that would drive the rest of his professional life. Engelbart's dream was to use computers to connect individuals in a network that would allow them to share and update information in “real time.” He combined this idea of collaborative software, or groupware, with his experience interpreting radar displays and with ideas he gleaned from an Atlantic Monthly article by Vannevar Bush (Bush, Vannevar), “As We May Think,” to envision networked computers employing a graphical user interface. After receiving a Ph.D. in electrical engineering from the University of California at Berkeley in 1955, he stayed on as an acting assistant professor for a year before accepting a position with the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) in Stanford, California. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() In 1977 SRI sold Engelbart's NLS groupware system to Tymshare, Incorporated, a telephone networking company that renamed it Augment and sought to make it into a commercially viable office automation system. As the last remaining member of his research laboratory, and with SRI showing no further interest in his work, Engelbart joined Tymshare. In 1984 Tymshare was acquired by the McDonnell Douglas Corporation, where Engelbart worked on information systems. In 1989 he founded the Bootstrap Institute, a research and consulting firm. Over the following decade he finally began to receive recognition for his innovations, including the 1997 Turing Award, a major achievement in computer science. Additional Reading Douglas C. Engelbart, “A Conceptual Framework for the Augmentation of Man's Intellect” and “Toward High-Performance Knowledge Workers,” in Irene Greif (ed.), Computer-Supported Cooperative Work: A Book of Readings (1988), give clear expositions of Engelbart's ideas on computers and their use. |
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