Bootstrap Institute
.
June 30, 2006
Reports that feature Doug Engelbart 2
Articles 2A
Whatever Happened to...?, Bill Machrone. PC Magazine, June 21, 2006. 2A140
The Dream of a Lifetime. Bill Joy. Technology Review, August, 2005. 2A139
Exclusive interview with seminal 1960s computer visionary Doug Engelbart. Tom Foremski. SiliconValleyWatcher, June 10, 2005. 2A138
A tribute to one of Silicon Valley's most influential and forgotten researchers at Xerox Parc event. Tom Foremski. SiliconValleyWatcher, June 9, 2005. 2A137
A history of the GUI. Jeremy Reimer. SiliconValleyWatcher, May 5, 2005. 2A136
A man, a mouse, a mission. Peter Burrows. Business Week, November 2, 2004. 2A135
From mice to windows. Otis Port in the series, "The Great Innovators", Business Week, September 6, 2004, p.18. 2A134
The man who built a better mouse trap. Michael Kanellos, CNET News.com, September 18, 2003. 2A133
Engelbart takes bootstrapping quest
to capital. Dan Gillmor, San Jose Mercury News, October 12, 2002 2A132
1963-64: The invention of the mouse by Douglas Engelbart (EE, '55).
David Pescovitz, Berkeley College of Engineering, Lab Notes, July 2002. 2A135
Back Door: Q&A with Douglas Engelbart. William Van Winkle, Computer
Power User, April 2002. 2A134
Misunderstood
pioneer: Douglas Engelbart's inventions outshone his KM research.
Larry Stevens, Knowledge Management,
August 2001. 2A131
Of
mouse and man: Computer mouse pioneer looks for faster way to help
world solve its problems, Solarina Ho, San Fransisco Chronicle,
May 11, 2001. 2A130
Glimpses
of the past and visions of the future: The Douglas Engelbart story,The
Journal of Sigma Phi Epsilon, Spring 2001, p.22-23. 2A129
The man who didn't get rich and
other lessons from the information age, Richard Todd, Worth Magazine,
May 2001. 2A128
Long-distance
thinker - Tech visionary Doug Engelbart still crusading for new ideas,
Yung-pei Chen, The Argus, April 29, 2001. 2A127
Computer Mouse Marks Birthday No. 20
-- Or Is It No. 38? Dru Sefton, Newhouse
News Service, April 26, 2001. 2A126
Douglas
Engelbart: Computer visionary seeks to boost people's collective
ability to confront complex problems coming at a faster pace, Marion
Softky, The Almanac, February 21, 2001. 2A125
Internet pioneer lauded by computer
scientists, Mark Shahinian, Palo Alto Daily News, December 21,
2000. 2A124
Inventor Douglas Engelbart, his
vision helped make computers approachable, Michael Mink, Investor's
Business Daily, December 6, 2000. 2A123
Computer visionary wins national
medal, --, Menlo/Atherton The Almanac, December 6, 2000. 2A122
Technology medal honors man of the
mouse, Carrie Kirby, San Francisco Chronicle, December 1, 2000. 2A121
Internet pioneer is technologist,
humanitarian, David Plotnikoff, San Jose Mercury News, November
25, 2000. 2A120
A
conversation with Doug Engelbart. Eugene Eric Kim, Dr. Dobb's
Journal, September 2000. 2A119
Doug Engelbart has had plans for the
Internet before it even existed. Susanna Stromberg, Red Herring (Profile),
April 2000. 2A118
We must leverage what we know - then
leverage that, Dan Gillmor, San Jose Mercury News, January 9,
2000. 2A117
Happy anniversary, mouse! The
Hindu Monday Mart, December 25, 1999. [Courtesy: Business Wire
Service] 2A116
El raton cumple 35 anos. Muy Extra,
Otono 1999. 2A115
Unfinished revolution. Warren
Karlenzig, Knowledge Management (Knowledge Talk), August 1999. 2A114
Doug Engelbart: The Unfinished
Revolution. Blake Harris, Government Technology
Magazine: Special Issue "Visions: technology and government for the
new milennium." August 1999. 2A113
Flashback 1972: Xerox Parc and
the Alto. Leslie Goff, CNN.com, July 8, 1999. 2A112
Flashback 1967: The mighty mouse.
Laura Hunt, CNN.com, July 7, 1999. (From
Computerworld, May 10, 1999.) 2A111
Honoring our ancestors. Reva Basch, Online
Magazine, March 1999. 2A110
Des souris et un homme. SVM Mac,
March 1999. 2A109
Computer
mouse creator wins invention prize. USA Today (Tech Report),
February. 28, 1999. 2A108
Boosting your collective IQ. Debra
Hvass, Spotlight on Performance, 16:2, 1999. 2A107
The mouse man (Six parts).
Tia O'Brian, San José Mercury News West
Magazine, February 7, 1999. 2A106
Silicon Valley finds its past in a
blast. Joan O'C. Hamilton, Business Week, January 25, 1999. 2A105
Mouse memories. Newsweek
(Cyberscope), December 21, 1998. 2A104
The Bootstrap Alliance: Knowledge is
a contact sport. Susan Gilles, Catalyst, Winter 1998. 2A103
Mighty Mouse still rules. Booth
Moore, The Japan Times, December 16, 1998. 2A102
Of mice, men and
machines. Andrew Leonard, The Salon.com, December 15, 1998. 2A101
Beyond the mouse: Engelbart and
social change [text file]. Eugene Eric Kim, Dr. Dobb's Web Site,
December 11, 1998. 2A100
Visionaries plot the next revolution:
Inventor of mouse honored and future is imagined. Janet Rae-Dupree, San
Jose Mercury News, December 10, 1998. 2A99
Upgrading the human OS. Steve Silberman, Wired News, December 10, 1998. 2A98
Say cheese: Computer mouse turns 30. Don Knapp, CNN.com, December 9, 1998. Also on CBS News. 2A97
Happy 30th to the magical mouse,
Martha Mendoza, Taunton Daily Gazette, December 9, 1998. 2A96
Of a mouse and a man. K.Oanh Ha, San
Jose Mercury News, December 8, 1998. 2A95
Computer rodent turns 30. Martha
Mandoza, Palo Alto Daily News, December 8, 1998. 2A94
The mouse that roared: Computer
visionary's idea changed the world. David L. Chandler, Boston Sunday
Globe, December 6, 1998. 2A93
History in the making - The Silicon
Valley Archives tracks it as it happens, Kurt Brantman, San
Francisco Gate, December 2, 1998. 2A92
The mouse that rolled. Reid Kanaley, Knight
Ridder Newspapers, December __ ,1998. 2A91
Future of computing scrutinized.
Janet Rae-Dupree, The Cincinnati Enquirer, December __, 1998. 2A90
30 years click, click, hooray! for
computer mouse, --, Cincinnati Enquirer, December 1998. 2A89
The mouse is older than you think -
and still growing, --, Sentinel San Francisco via The New
York Times, October 5, 1998. 2A88
Starting point: Tracking the birth of
the mouse. Mark Glaser, Entertainment Weekly, September 4, 1998. 2A87
The legacy of an eternal optimist. Business
Week, February 23, 1998. 2A86
Boosting collective IQ and
implications for software developers, Steve Aranoff, Software Forum
News, October 1997 (includes cassette tape of talk). 2A85
The big cheese! Kids' Wall Street
News, 2:3, July/August 1997. 2A84
Finally, kudos for the man who made
it all click. Lisa Granatstein, Time Digital, June, 1997. 2A83
A
worthy prizewinner: Doug Engelbart. Bob Haavind, Computer Design,
June 1997. 2A82
Engelbart awarded $500,000 Lifetime
Achievement Award. SRI Highlights, May/June 1997. 2A81
Collaborative computing pioneer
Engelbart wins $500,000 prize. Stan Augarten, Group Computing,
May/June 1997. 2A80
The man behind
the mouse. Otis Port, Business Week, April 21, 1997. 2A79
Portland inventor makes good:
$500,000 prize. Richard L. Hill, The Oregonian, April 11, 1997. 2A78
Mouse inventor talks about groupware
- Doug Engelbart believes more collaboration necessary for industry to
grow. Stewart Deck, Computerworld, April 10, 1997. 2A77
Inventor
of the mouse wins $500,000 prize: Bay Area scientist wins Lemelson-MIT
Award for creation. Arthur M Louis, San Fransisco Chronicle,
April 10, 1997. 2A76
Mouse's big cheese. Jim Dwyer, New
York Daily News, April 10, 1997. 2A75
Computer mouse creator wins invention
prize, The Associated Press, USA Today - High-tech, April 10,
1997. 2A74
Computer pioneer wins Lemelson-MIT
Prize: Computer trailblazer Douglas Engelbart receives half-million
dollars for invention and innovation. MIT press release, New
York, NY, April 9, 1997. 2A73
Prominent Alumnus Doug Engelbart
receives prestigious award for inventors. David Stauth, The Oregon
Stater, April 1997. 2A72
The mouse that roared. Ken Baker, People
Magazine, March 25, 1997. 2A71
What you see is all you get. Harvey
Lehtman, ACM Interactions, January/February 1997. 2A70
Tools that make business better and
better: A Silicon Valley legend who pioneered the mouse and pioneered the Int. Thomas Stewart, Fortune Magazine, December 23, 1996. 2A69
Computer Pioneer Works to Raise
the 'Collective I.Q.' of Organizations. Denise Caruso, New
York Times, CyberTimes Section, Ocober. 7, 1996. [Also The Site MSNBC-TV
interview of Engelbart by Denise Caruso.] 2A68
The man who invented the present is
still working on the future. Howard Rheingold, The Publishing
Resource Services, October 3, 1996. 2A67
Improving your
organization's IQ. Frances Hessselbein, Premier Issue of Leader
to Leader, a publication of the Drucker Foundation, September 1996.
[reprints available from Bootstrap Institute] 2A66
Man of the mouse. Nickelodeon
Magazine, September 1996. 2A65
Douglas Engelbart & the invention
of groupware. Stan Augarten, Group Computing, July/August 1996.
[reprints available from Bootstrap Institute] 2A64
The man who sees
the future. Eric Ransdell, U.S. News & World Report, May
20, 1996. [reprints available from Bootstrap Institute] 2A63
Of mice and men. Kate Button, Computer
Weekly/Pioneers, May 2, 1996. 2A62
Doug
Engelbart: Father of the mouse. Andrew Maisel, SuperKids,
March 1996. 2A61
Educators seek technology insights.
John M. Moran, The Hartford Courant, January 30, 1996. 2A60
Mouse inventor has own crusade. Cissy
Ross, Santa Barbara News Press, September 11, 1995. 2A59
Met de computer zitten we pas in
1907. Lucas Ligtenberg, NRC Handelsblad, July 13, 1995. 2A58
The social construction of the
personal computer user. Thierry Bardini, Journal of Communication
45:3, 1995, pp.40-65. 2A57
Bootstrapping to the future. Laurie
Flynn, The New York Times, p.8F, December 18, 1994. 2A56
Long distance perspectives on
hypermedia. Helen Ashman, ACM SIGLINK Newsletter, December 1994. 2A55
A computer visionary looks back - and
ahead. Keith Henderson, The Christian Science Monitor, Tuesday,
November 8, 1994, p.14. 2A54
ASAP legends - Douglas Engelbart.
Owen Edwards, Forbes ASAP, October 10, 1994. 2A53
Network pioneer Douglas Engelbart
breaks the barriers between man and machine. Stan Kolodziej, Network
World, October 5, 1994. 2A52
Mighty mouse who invented modern
computing. David Simpson, The Scotsman, Tuesday, 13 September
1994. 2A51
Scientist still connects to vision of
global info. Bobbi Nodell, Oakland Tribune, September 7, 1994. 2A50
The nice guy who finished last. David
Plotnikoff, San Jose Mercury News (Living Section), September 4,
1994. 2A49
What's in your dream? Katsura
Hattori, Asahi, p.7, July 15, 1994. [Japanese] 2A48
Tech pioneer Douglas Engelbart:
inventing computer standards that have remade society. Ted Bunker, Investor's
Business Daily, July 11, 1994. 2A47
Always ahead of his time - Douglas
Engelbart. Michael Fitzgerald, Computerworld, 25th Anniversary
Edition, June 22, 1992. 2A46
Inga pek pinnar om Engelbarts pikdon.
Ahrvid Engholm, PC World/Sweden, June 1992, p. 74. 2A45
Douglas Engelbart's design for
knowledge-based organizations Part 1. Required technology: Open
hyperdocument systems). Patricia B. Seybold. Paradigm Shift 3: 8
(February 12, 1992). Part 2. Co-evolution of organizations and
technology). Patricia B. Seybold. Paradigm Shift 3: 9 (March 25,
1992). 2A44
Mannen bakom musen. Ahrvid Engholm, PC
World/Sweden, February 28, 1992. 2A43
The personal stuff is great, but....
Joanne Kelleher, Computerworld, May 20, 1991. 2A42
Inventor of mouse moves on to bigger
and better things. Richard McCormack, New Technology Week, March
25, 1991. 2A41
Racing change on a merry-go-round.
Paul Saffo, Personal Computing, May 25, 1990. 2A40
Conquering complexity by augmenting
the human intellect. Patricia Seybold, Postscript On Information
Technology, April 1990. 2A39
Engineer builds a better mouse.
Lamont Wood, Chicago Tribune, March 18, 1990. 2A38
It would be difficult to exaggerate
Doug Engelbart's effect on the computer industry. Steve Rosenthal, Electric
Word, March/April 1990. 2A37
Looking to the future. Paul Saffo, Bay
Area Computer Currents, January 30, 1990. 2A36
Computer in 2000. Paul Saffo, The
Computer, October 28, 1989. [Japanese] 2A35
Forget Batman; let's talk Mighty
Mouse!, Jim Warren, Microtimes, August 7, 1989. 2A34
Doug Engelbart: Visionary becomes
realist. Jim Warren, Microtimes, July 7, 1989. 2A33
The X revolution. Daniel Lynch, LAN
Technology (Outlook), May 1989. 2A32
Pioneer to head new project at
Stanford. SU Speaking Of Computers, April 3, 1989. 2A31
Inventor of `mouse' receives support
for Project Bootstrap. SU Campus Report, March 29, 1989. 2A30
A chat with Douglas Engelbart. Wayne
Jacques, The Boston Computer Society, Spring 1989. 2A29
The latest trend in how to use
personal computers. Asahi, February 15, 1989, March 1, March 15,
1989. 2A28
Doug Engelbart: The vision continues.
Howard Rheingold, Microtimes, January 23, 1989. 2A27
Pioneer to head new think tank. Emily
Brower, MacWeek, September 27, 1988. 2A26
Where we are, where we aren't. N.
Dean Meyer from N. Dean Meyer & Associates and Bill Machrone from PC
Magazine, Teleforum, September 22, 1988. 2A25
Computer scientist forming a
foundation. John Markoff, The New York Times, September 5, 1988. 2A24
The man who invented the mouse - and
many other tools for thought. Barbara Anderson, McDonnell
Douglas/Spirit, August 1988. 2A23
Douglas C. Engelbart - A conceptual
framework for the augmentation of man's intellect. Edited and annotated
by Howard Rheingold, Hyperage, May/June 1988. 2A22
The mouse that roared. McDonnell
Douglas's BreakThrough Magazine, 1988. 2A21
SRI firsts: The mouse and other
innovations. Inside SRI, April 1987. 2A20
The HLAM/T factor: Ted Nelson
interviews Doug Engelbart. Subroutines (David Bunnell's
Newsletter from Inside the Personal Computer Industry), January 1987. 2A19
The mouse that roared. John Markoff, San
Francisco Examiner, March 23, 1986. 2A18
Insight to Engelbart's intellect.
Systems Catalyst, Institute of Systems Science, Singapore, June
1985. 2A17
Providing a workshop for knowledge
workers. Richard G. Canning, EDP Analyzer, August 1984. 2A16
Father of the mouse. John Unger
Zussman, A+ Magazine, Vol. 2, July 1984. 2A15
Of mice and men - the mouse is but a
small part of Doug Engelbart's larger quest. Steven Levy, Popular
Computing, May 1984. 2A14
A mouse in the hand. Daniel Farber, MacWorld
(premier issue), May 1984. 2A13
Doug Engelbart: inventor of the
mouse. Marion Softky, The Country Almanac, February 15, 1984. 2A12
Superliteracy - Network Systems, The
CIA and the electronic grail: A writer's quest for perfectly flexible
text. Clifford Barney, PC Magazine, February/March 1982. 2A11
Augmenting the human mind; An
interview with Dr. Douglas C. Engelbart. Barbara Otto, The IMSAI-DER
[Future Feature], December 1978. 2A10
Tymshare's AUGMENT heralding a new
era. Patricia B. Seybold, The Seybold Report on Word Processing,
October 1978. 2A9
Doug Engelbart and `the augmentation
of intellect'. [article sent to DCE from the Computer Library, 1978]. 2A8
ARPAnet links computerized business
world. SRI Intercom, April 11, 1975. 2A7
Knowledge workshops are his hope. Mike
Merritt, Computerworld, 1973. 2A6
Thinking man's computer. Bill
Stockton, Palo Alto Times, March 13, 1972. 2A5
Toward the decentralized intellectual
workshop. Nilo Lindgren, Innovation, No. 24, September 1971. 2A4
No more pencils, no more books - write
and read electronically. Roger K. Field, Electronics, November
24, 1969. 2A3
Quick-thinking computer aids human
decision makers. Marge Scandling, Palo Alto Times, December 10,
1968. 2A2
Augmenting your intellect. Research/Development,
August 1968. 2A1
Video/TV 2B
JCN Profiles: Visionary leaders of the
information age. 22-min. VHS video cassette recording of Marc Doyle
interviewing Douglas Engelbart for the Mind Extension University
Education Network in March 1995. 2B1
Books (One or more
chapters) 2C
"Bootstrapping: Douglas Engelbart,
Coevolution, and the Origins of Personal Computing." Thierry Bardini.
Stanford University Press, 2000. 2C5
"Bootstrapping." BG Wennersten, Teldok
'84 Rapport, Tryckeri: Hj Brolina Offset AB, Stockholm, Sweden. 1993. 2C4
The pioneering work of Douglas C.
Engelbart, L. J. Bannon, Edited by Z. W. Pylyshyn and L. J. Bannon,
"Perspectives on the Computer Revolution," Ablex Publishing Corporation,
1989, pp. 301.306. 2C3
"Portraits of Success - Impressions of
Silicon Valley Pioneers." Carolyn Caddes, Tioga Publishing Company, page
66, 1986. 2C2
"Tools for Thought." Chapter 9: The
Loneliness of a Long-Distance Thinker. Howard Rheingold, Simon &
Schuster, 1985. 2C1
August 19, 2005
Reports that feature Doug Engelbart with
select others 3
Articles 3A
On The Town: A glimpse behind the research of a computing pioneer.
Leigh Weimers, San Jose Mercury News, April 1, 2002, p. 3B. 3A75
See how they run - The history, technology & future of mice. Kylee Dickey, Smart
Computing, March 2002. 3A74
We've been framed! Robert X. Cringely, PBS, The Pulpit, January 23,
2002. 3A73
The making of the mouse. Alex Soojung-Kim Pang, American Heritage of
Invention & Technology, Winter 2002, Vol. 17, No. 3. 3A72
Computer mouse: Mice and men. Mark Fischetti,
Scientific American, October 2001. 3A71
The 20th Anniversary of the PC? - Well, sort of. Duncan Martell, PC
Magazine/Technology - Reuters, August 8, 2001. 3A70
Of mice and men: A history of personal computing. The Nickle Arts
Museum, Curated by John Hails and Aaren Madden, University of Calgary,
Calgary, Alberta, Canada, 2001. 3A69
The gods of tech. Alan Deutschman, Vanity
Fair Magazine, July 2000. 3A68
Startups: How we began. Julie Rose, Fortune
Small Business, May-June 2000. 3A67
The five most influential people in
computing. Matt Lake, CNET.com, May 25, 2000. 3A66
Here is an idea! Jill Rosenfeld, Fast
Company, April 2000. 3A65
A century of technology,"Steve
Ditlea, Popular Mechanics/Special Collector Issue, January 2000. 3A64
Millennium 100 - Who made Silicon
Valley what it is today?, David E. Early and Charles Matthews, Silicon
Valley Magazine, December 19, 1999. 3A63
The Net turns 30, Bonnie Azab Powell, Red
Herring, December 1999. 3A62
Meet people who invented the
internet, Tony Kontzer, Investor's Business Daily, October 1,
1999. 3A61
Fathers of invention - They created
the first computer network, 30 years ago, Michael Mattis, Business
2.0, October 1999. 3A60
Workplace learning power is topic of
SRI futurist panel, Miranda Ewell, San Jose Mercury News,
September 15, 1999. 3A59
Finally, the Internet has a birth
date, David Plotnikoff, San Jose Mercury News, September 9,
1999. 3A58
The unknown soldiers, Matthew
McKinnon, Shift Magazine, May 1999. 3A57
Masterminds. Karen O'Leary, Gentry,
April 1999. 3A56
Of mice and men, Anne Freedman, The
Intelligencer Record, March 28, 1999. 3A55
Giving credit where it's overdue,
Gambits/Editors, Upside, March 1999. 3A54
The Rodent Revolution: 30-year-old
mouse ready for change," ABCNEWS.com, December 9, 1998. 3A53
Mouse celebrates 30 years of computer
connections, Martha Mendoza, The Argus of Fremont, CA, December
5, 1998. 3A51
Be part of history with valley
Archives: Synposium will be a showcase, Dan Gillmor, San Jose
Mercury News, December 1, 1998. 3A50
Mouse inventor honored, [author
unknown], The Oregon Stater/Classmates and Friends News,
December 1998. 3A49
National Inventors Hall of Fame adds
6 new members to collection, Jim Quinn, Akron Beacon Journal,
September 20, 1998. 3A48
Der Erfinder der Maus," Christoph
Droesser, Die Zeit Magazin, No 35, August 20, 1998, Items 21 and
22. 3A47
Commentary: Turing Award winner Doug
Engelbart reflects on past and plans for future, ACMMemberNet,
41: 7 (July 1998). 3A46
Den forste testpiloti cyberspace, Af
Marc Proschold, Illustreret Videnskab Magazine, May 1998, pp.
36-39. 3A45
Of mouse and man: Today's mouse
technology scurries toward a wireless future, John Ward, The Inside
Line, 11: 5 (May 1998). 3A44
A brief history of human-computer
interface technology, Brad A. Myers, ACM - Interactions,
March-April 1998. 3A43
From mice to hamsters, J.D.
Biersdorfer, The New York Times, February 26, 1998. 3A42
Tales from Spin-Off City," Otis Port, Business
Week, February 23, 1998. 3A41
WWW6 a glimpse into construction of a
world of wire, David Plotnikoff, San Jose Mercury News, April
13, 1997. 3A40
Emcee has the last - and wittiest -
word in revenge, Chris Nolan, San Jose Mercury News, March 5,
1997. 3A39
Inventor of mouse hopes to inspire,
Michael V. Copeland, Castro Valley Daily Review, March 1997. 3A38
WWW: Past, present, and future," Tim
Berners-Lee, Anniversary Feature, Computer - Innovative technology for
computer professionals, IEEE Computer Society 50 Years of Service,
October 1996. 3A37
Alumni honorees set pace with new
solutions, new technology - Douglas Engelbart: Realized visions of a
world at work, U.C. Berkeley Engineering MATRIX, 24,: 4 (Fall
1996). 3A36
The Net's big bang, David Plotnikoff, San
Jose Mercury News, August 4, 1996. 3A35
Nothing up their sleeves? John
Markoff, The New York Times, Monday, March 11, 1996. 3A34
50
Years after 'As we may think': The Brown/MIT Vannevar Bush
Symposium. Featuring Engelbart as keynote speaker. See
also symposium
people/talks. Rosemary Simpson, Allen Renear, Elli Mylonas, Andries
van Dam, ACM Interactions, March 1996. 3A33
A look into the labs, Alice LaPlante, Computerworld,
August 1, 1995. 3A32
Groupware not a Lotus invention,
Keely Brunner, Computerworld, July 10, 1995. 3A31
The 10th Annual Editors' Choice
Awards/Special-Achievement Awards. MacUser, March 1995, p. 79. 3A30
The creators. Katie Hafner, Wired,
December 1994. 3A29
The rise and fall of the first
computer network. David Plotnikoff, San Jose Mercury News,
Living Section, September 4, 1994. 3A28
A salute to the winners. Gary Beach, Computerworld,
June 27, 1994. 3A27
Awards spotlight high tech heroes.
Erin Callaway, Computerworld, June 13, 1994. 3A26
Douglas Engelbart, Special Interview, MacWorld
Japan, March 1994, p. 92. (Kohira, photographer) 3A25
Before the Altair -- The history of
personal computing, Larry Press, Communications of the ACM, 36:9
(September 1993), pp 27-33. 3A24
The creative edge. Laurence Hooper, The
Wall Street Journal (Technology Genius), Monday, May 24, 1993. 3A23
Two men, two visions of one computer
world, indivisible. Andrew Pollack, The New York Times, December
8, 1991. 3A22
Groupware: Addressing a need for
improving productivity. Robert Haavind, Electronic Business,
September 17, 1990. 3A21
The BYTE Summit: Sixty-three
of the most creative and influential people in the industry discuss
their perspectives on the microcomputer industry of the future. Byte
Magazine, September 1990, pp 226-365. 3A20
Lean and limber will describe the
company of the future. Robert Haavind, Electronic Business,
April 30, 1990. 3A19
A whole new way of using computers.
Sherrie Van Tyle, Electronics, February 1990. 3A18
Of mice and menus: Designing the
user-friendly interface. Tekla S. Perry and John Voelcker, IEEE
Spectrum, September 1989. 3A17
HyperCargo. Stuart Greene, Apple
Viewpoints, January 30, 1989. 3A16
Who's who in the South Bay - A Salute
to the Movers & Shakers & Doers; Notable figures in our own
backyard. Laura M. Lukas, The Insider, June 11, 1988. 3A15
Lifetime Achievement Award: Awards
for Technical Excellence, PC Magazine, January 12, 1988. 3A14
Silicon Valley searches for its soul.
Howard Rheingold, San Francisco Magazine, January/February 1988. 3A13
What's all the talk tbout hypertext,
anyway? Paul Karon, PC Week, October 6, 1987. 3A12
The 100 most powerful people in
Silicon Valley/The desk set and its power plays. Michael S. Malone, San
Jose Mercury/News West Magazine, June 7, 1987. 3A11
Adult pioneers are `Boomtown' focus.
David Rosenthal, San Jose Mercury News, January 14, 1987. 3A10
Unpopular science. Brenton R.
Schlender, The Wall Street Journal, November 10, 1986. 3A9
Highway of knowledge is old road.
Robert M. Gordon, Los Angeles Times: (Letters), August 24, 1986. 3A8
Hypermedia, Jeffrey S. Young, Macworld,
March 1986. 3A7
The Macintosh family tree. Ted Nace, Macworld,
November 1984. 3A6
A modern mouse story. Vanessa
Schnatmeier, A+ Magazine, Vol. 2 (July 1984). 3A5
It's the year of the mouse! Tom Foth, Softalk,
April 1984. 3A4
The tale of the mouse. Paul Somerson, PC
Magazine, February 1983. 3A3
An office in your briefcase. Anon., Computer
Weekly International, July 3, 1975. 3A2
Computers offer tool for thinking.
Robert C. Cowen, The Christian Science Monitor, April 29, 1966. 3A1
Video/TV 3B
We've
been framed! (Readers respond with prior art invalidating the SBC web
patent) Robert X. Cringely. PBS, January 23, 2001. 3B4
"Nerds 2.0.1.: A brief history of the
Internet," (Episode 1: Networking the nerds; Episode 2: Serving the
suits; Episode 3: Wiring the world), Catherine Wilson/Associate
Producer, Oregon Public Broadcasting, December 1998. [in storage
box] 3B3
"Augmenting Human Intellect 35 Years
Later - Bay Area Computer History Perspectives," Sun Microsystems,
November 12, 1997. 3B2
"Silicon Valley Boomtown." 60-min. VHS
video cassette recording produced by KTEH Channel 54 of San Jose,
CA in 1987. 3B1
Books (One or more
pages) 3C
"What the Dormouse Said." John Markoff, Viking, 2005, pp. 4-12, 14-20, 39-58,75,89,103,118,144-148,164,176-177,242-245,276,286-287. 3C16
"The New Media Reader." Edited by Noah Wardrip-Fruin and Nick Montfort, The MIT Press, 2003, pp. 5,29,35,93-108,231-246,290. 3C15
"Human-Computer Interaction." Alan Dix, Janet Finlay, Gregory D. Abowd,
Russell Beale, Pearson Education Limited, Third Edition 2004, pp. 72, 167-169, 176. 3C14
"Cyber_Reader," 43 Contributors, Phaidon Press, Inc., 2002, pp. 60-65. 3C19
"How The Web Was Born: The Story of the World Wide Web." James Gillies &
Robert Cailliau, Oxford University Press, 2000, pp. 91, 98-100, 104, 118, 130, 195, 203, 232. 3C13
"The Dream Machine: J.C.R. Licklider
and the Revolution That Made Computing Personal," M. Mitchell Waldrop.
Penguin Books, 2002, pp. 5, 210-217, 241-243, 255, 261, 273, 278, 285, 287-294, 342, 358, 360, 364, 406,, 465, 470. 3C12
"Virtual Teams - 2nd Edition," Jessica Lipnack & Jeffrey Stamps, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2000, pp. 17-18, 257-258. 3C18
"Fire in the valley - The Making of
the Personal Computer," (Second Edition) Paul Freiberger and Michael
Swaine, McGraw-Hill Publishers, Inc., 2000, pp. 207, 209-210, 303-306,
408-409, 437-440, 446. 3C11
"Engineering Tomorrow," Trudy E. Bell
and Dave Dooling, IEEE Press, 2000, pp. 82-84. 3C10
"Weaving the Web," Tim Berners-Lee
with Mark Fischetti, HarperCollins Publishers, Inc., 1999, pp. 6, 50. 3C9
"Computer Media and Communication,"
Edited by Paul A. Mayer, Oxford University Press, 1999, Chapter 4. 3C8
"Virtual Teams," Jessica Lipnack & Jeffrey Stamps, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997, p. 18. 3C17
"Interface Culture," Steven Johnson,
HarperCollins Publishers, 1997, pp. 11, 13-14, 16, 20-22, 24, 26, 38,
44, 46, 47, 82, 90, 169, 225. 3C7
"Wizards and Their Wonders,"
Christopher Morgan/Louis Fabian Bachrach, ACM Press, 1997, pp. 76-77. 3C6
"Organizing Genius," Warren
Bennis/Patricia Ward Biederman, Addison-Wesley Publishing, 1997, pp.
64-65, 67, 171. 3C5
"Where Wizards Stay Up Late," Katie
Hafner & Matthew Lyon, Simon & Schuster, 1996, pp. 72, 78, 203,
263. 3C4
"Computer Currents - Navigating
Tomorrow's Technology," George Beekman, The Benjamin/Cummings Publishing
Company, Inc., 1994, pp. 154-155. 3C3
"The Virtual Community," Howard Rheingold, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1993, pp. 52, 65-66, 70, 72-73, 113-114. 3C16
"Virtual Reality." Howard Rheingold,
Simon & Schuster, 1991, pp. 72-75, 81-88, 98, 101, 105, 133, 180,
241-246. 3C2
"Interactive Multimedia, Visions of Multimedia for Developers, Educators & Information Providers," 1988, pp. 15-31 (D. Engelbart, "The Augmentation System Framework.") 3C25
"Symposium Proceedings," Computer Professionals For Social Responsibility, August 21, 1988, pp. 1-17 (D. Engelbart's 1970 & 1972 papers.) 3C24
"Computer-Supported Cooperative Work: A Book of Readings," Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Inc., pp. 35-126 (D. Engelbart's 1963, 1968, 1982 & 1984 papers.) 3C23
"Portraits of Success, Impressions of Silicon Valley Pioneers," Carolyn Caddes, Tioga Publishing Company, 1986, pp. 66-67. 3C22
"Emerging Office Systems, Based on Proceeding of the Stanford University International Symposium on Office Automation," Robert M. Landau, James H. Bair & Jean H. Siegman, Ablex Publishing Corporation, 1982 & 1984, pp. 134, 287-308. (includes D. Engelbart's 1978 & 1980 papers.) 3C21
"Vistas In Information Handling, The Augmentation Of Man's Intellect By Machine," Sparton Books, February 1963, pp. 1-29 (Chapter 1: D. Engelbart's 1963 paper.) 3C20
"En Route to Compatible Computing",
Input/Output, Time-Life Books, Inc., 1986. 3C1
March 22, 2005
Reports that mention Doug Engelbart 4
Articles 4A
How we began. Julie Rose, Fortune, April 17, 2000. 4A29
The digital century: Computing through the ages. PC World, November 29,1999. 4A28
Building a better computer mouse. Evan Hansen, CNet News.com, October
2, 2002. 4A27
Artists & Entertainers of the 20th Century: 60 Second Symposium. James
Carney, Time Magazine, 100 Special Issue, June 8, 1998, p.45. 4A26
Mausoleum, [author unknown], konr@d
Magazine, February 1998, p. 13. 4A25
SRI at 50: what next? Marion Softky, The
Country Almanac, January 29, 1997. 4A24
Digital greats rate a Nobel, Dan
Gillmore, San Jose Mercury News, October 19, 1997, p. E1. 4A23
Enemies...buddies...old friends...,"
Angela Gunn, Yahoo! Internet Life, August 1997. 4A22
InfiNetly rewarding, David
Plotnikoff, San Jose Mercury News (Living Section), Oct. 3, 1996. 4A21
Your true love is a computer? Better
get a life! Phillip Robinson, San Jose Mercury News, Section E,
December 18, 1994. 4A20
A net gain. James W. Crawley, The
San Diego Union-Tribune, September 4, 1994. 4A19
The birth of the internet. Barbara
Kantrowitz and Adam Rogers, Newsweek, August 8, 1994. 4A18
Looking for the next revolution - The
Rolling Stone interview with Steve Jobs. Jeff Goodell, Rolling Stone,
June 16, 1994. 4A17
How Mac changed the world. Philip
Elmer-Dewitt, Time, January 31, 1994. 4A16
Review set of patent in dispute. John
Markoff, The New York Times, December 17, 1993. 4A15
Wir bauen die Datenautobahn. Das
Gesprach/Gerd Meissner/Helmut Sorge, Der Spiegel, April 1993. 4A14
Not everyone in the Valley loves
silicon-friendly government. John Markoff, The New York Times,
March 7, 1993. 4A13
Striking a chord. Tom Schmitz, San
Jose Mercury News, February 23, 1992. 4A12
The highway to the future. John
Schwartz, Newsweek, January 13, 1992. 4A11
The mousetrap. Tom Schmitz, San
Jose Mercury News, January 12, 1992. 4A10
Hypertext - The smart tool for
information overload. Robert Haavind, MIT's Technology Review,
November/December 1990. 4A9
Hypervisions. David Bunnell, Macworld,
March 1987. 4A8
Innovations of '87, Peter H. Lewis, PC
Magazine, November 2, 1987. 4A7
Apple might learn a thing or two from
I.B.M.. Erik Sandberg-Diment, The New York Times, March 19,
1985. 4A6
Executive support: A delicate balance.
Eileen Feretic and Tim Moran, Today's Office, June 1984. 4A5
Augmenting Human Intellect, A
Life-Long Crusade, [author unknown], It's About Tym, June 1984. 4A4
The Year of the Mouse, Philip Faflick, Time
Magazine, January 31, 1983. 4A3
ARPA dominates the networks
discussion. Tim Palmer Reports on the Communication Networks Seminar at
Sussex University. Computer Weekly, September 20, 1973. 4A2
The communications revolution. J.C.R.
Licklider and Robert W. Taylor, Science & Technology, April
1968. 4A1
Video/TV 4B
Understanding Computing. 53-min. VHS
video cassette recording showing how the numbering system was developed
and advanced into computing. Produced by Cronkite Ward & Company in
June 1995. 4B2
The Internet Show. ___-min. VHS video
cassette recording produced by Brandenburg Productions, Inc. in 1994. 4B1
Books 4C
"Information Systems - A Business Approach," Steve Benson & Craig Standing, John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd., 2002, p. 61. 4C14
"Information Systems - A Business Approach," Steve Benson & Craig Standing, John Wiley & Sons, 2nd Edition, 2004/2005, p. 67. 4C13
"Database Backed Web Sites: The Thinking Person's Guide to Web Publishing," Philip Greenspun, Ziff-Davis Press, 1997, p. 334. 4C12
"Working With Objects, The OOran Software Engineering Method," Trygve Reenskaug, P. Wold & O. A. Lehne, Manning Publications Company, 1996, Dedicated to Doug Engelbart, p. 285. 4C11
"Managing the Evolving Corporation," Langdon Morris, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1995, pp. 123-124 & 130. 4C10
"Being Digital," Prof. Nicholas Negroponte, Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1995, pp. 69, 130-131. 4C9
"Upsizing The Individual In The Downsized Organization," Robert Johansen & Rob Swigart, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1994, p. 165. 4C8
"Econoquake!, How to Survive & Prosper in The Coming Global Depression," Barry Howard Minkin, Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1993, pp. 88 and 239. 4C7
"Shared Minds, The New Technologies of Collaboration," Michael Schrage, Random House, Inc., 1990, p. 97. 4C6
"Information Systems Management In Practice," Barbara McNurlin & Ralph Sprague, Prentice Hall, 2nd Edition, 1989, pp. 208, 378-380. 4C5
"Mapping Hypertext," Robert E. Horn, The Lexington Institute, 1989, pp. 6, 254-257. 4C4
"Groupware," Robert Johansen, The Free Press, 1988, pp. 2-5, 39. 4C3
"Fumbling The Future, How Xerox invented, then ignored the first personal computer," Douglas K. Smith & Robert C. Alexander, William Morrow & Company, 1988, pp. 87-88, 107-109 & 169. 4C2
"Office Automation, A User-Driven Method," Don Tapscott, Plenum Press, 1982, pp. 1, 18-19, 41, 70 & 90. 4C1
January 8, 2001
Reports of which no copies are on hand to
verify content 5
Articles 5A
A quiet leap forward in cyberspace.
Aaron Zitner, Boston Globe, September 11, 1994. 5A7
PARC is back! Howard Rheingold, Wired,
February 1994. 5A6
6th Annual 100. Microtimes,
January 4, 1993, p.112. 5A5
Forsta musen vap av tra och hade sma
hjul. Ahrvid Engholm, Mikro Datorn, No.4 (1992), p. 24.
[Swedish]. 5A4
Tiden ar matte pa foretags Rompetens.
Kent Seifars, Utbildn Yngs Tidningen, No. 2 (1992), p.6.
[Swedish] 5A3
Learning tomorrow's multimedia in
education. Kristina Hooper and SueAnn Ambron, The Journal of the
Apple Education Advisory Council, Spring 1987. 5A2
Hvem skal bestc mme Du og jeg eller
IBM og Rank Xerox? Lars Olsen, Danish Computerworld, October
1984. 5A1
January 8, 2001
Radio/TV interviews 6
CNBC News interview, April 1997. 6F
CNN News interviews, March 1991 and
April 1997. 6E
"The Site," 30 minute interview with
Denise Caruso, MSNBC-TV, September 1996. 6D
"Forum with Michael Krasny," PBS Radio
30 minute interview with call-ins, September 24, 1996, 10:00 am. 6C
"JCN Profiles: Visionary Leaders of the
Information Age," (22-min. VHS video cassette recording), Douglas
Engelbart is interviewed by Marc Doyle for the Mind Extension University
Education Network, Jones Cable Network, March 1995. 6B
"Silicon Valley Boomtown," PBS Special
on History of Silicon Valley, KTEH, 1987. 6A
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