Doug Engelbart, inventor of the mouse, passes at 88

Though trackpads and touchscreens are slowly replacing the industrious little device, we’ve all used a mouse at one point or another, and they can found in tens of thousands of offices and homes across the globe, having served as a vital bit of modern computing for decades. Last night, the device’s inventor, Doug Engelbart, passed away at the age of 88 in his sleep.

ENGELBARTs_first_mouse

The information came from Engelbart’s daughter, who reported his passing in an email to the Computer History Museum located in California, the same state where the inventor worked at a research institute on a variety of other technologies used in modern times, including early forms of word processors, video teleconferencing, and email.

You can see the mouse for yourself in the image above, with the device being little more than a chunk of wood, a cable/connector, and a couple wheels inside that are made of metal. The invention took place in the 1960s, and it would be a while before it was adopted for widespread use with computers. Engelbart’s background consisted of electrical engineering, which he studied at Oregon State University, then going on to earn his doctorate degree in the same field from the University of California at Berkeley.

His career was kicked off by a stint during World War II as a radar technician, eventually leading to an electrical engineering position with Naca, which later became NASA. His focus eventually zeroed in on the mixture of human cognition and computers, taking him to the Stanford Research Institute. Not stopping there, however, he eventually started his own laboratory called the Augmentation Research Center.

Unfortunately for Engelbart, his patent on the mouse expired in 1987, and it was never widely used before that, having been licensed by the Stanford Research Institute to Apple for what was a decent sum at the time – 1983 – of $40,000. Since then, according to the BBC, it is believed that at least one billion mouses have been sold over the years.

Regardless, his work is said to have been before its time, and has found implementation in a lot of the modern technology we use now. He demonstrated the first-ever video teleconference at the same time he demonstrated the mouse, and also contributed to ARPANet, which eventually led to the creation of the Internet.

SOURCE: BBC


Doug Engelbart, inventor of the mouse, passes at 88 is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
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Blood Test Could Give You ‘OK’ For Aspirin Therapy

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By Jeffrey Kopman

An aspirin a day might keep your heart attacks at bay, researchers say, and there could be a blood test that lets you know for sure — even before you start aspirin therapy, according to a study from the Duke University Medical Center, published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

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Transgender Bathroom Rights Bill Passed By California Lawmakers

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California lawmakers approved a bill Wednesday that would require public K-12 schools to let transgender students choose which restrooms they use and which school teams they join based on their gender identity instead of their chromosomes.

Some school districts around the country have implemented similar policies, but the bill’s author says AB1266 would mark the first time a state has mandated such treatment by statute.

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Nokia’s Here Maps service comes to the Asha 501, beta release available now for download

DNP  Nokia's Here Maps comes to the Asha 501, beta release available now for download

The touchscreen Asha 501 Nokia unveiled back in May will now work with Here Maps, the company announced on its blog today. The navigation service is already available on Windows Phone 8, Firefox OS, Android and iOS, and its arrival on the Asha platform will boost that operating system’s more modest selection of apps. Available now as a beta release, Here Maps for the Asha 501 offers turn-by-turn navigation and real-time traffic information. It’s designed specifically for low-end smartphones without GPS on board, and Nokia’s post notes that the current version “is a starting point and we will improve the experience over time.” Upcoming changes will likely include improved satellite images, which the company says will soon be updated to a higher quality. Asha 501 users in select countries can nab the Here Maps beta via the source link below.

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Is Discovering Global Warming Our Greatest Scientific Achievement?

There are some very smart people on this planet we call Earth and they’ve all done some very smart things to help us understand the world better. Isaac Newton. Charles Darwin. Albert Einstein. No name scientists. Commenters of the Internet. We have them to thank. But of all the discoveries and accomplishments, is finding out about global warming mankind’s greatest scientific achievement?

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iFetch Indoor Ball Launcher

iFetch is a Kickstarter project that your furkid would love you to back up with your cash.

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Anav Silverman: Jerusalem Home Harbors Buried Second Temple Artifacts

Miriam Siebenberg lives in a very unusual house — unusual because of the fact that her home was built on top of another home, one that existed over 2,000 years ago.
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Audiva Develops Talking Window For Ad Purposes

Here is an ad idea – the Talking Window from Audiva.

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Yahoo! Purchases Xobni

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Apple App Store Celebrates 5th Anniversary

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