Difference between revisions of "Augmentation Research Center"

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The '''Augmentation Research Center''' (usually given as the acronym, '''ARC''') was a research group started by [[Douglas Engelbart]] at the [[SRI International|Stanford Research Institute]]. It did work in ground-breaking work in the areas of [[user interface]]s and [[application]]s.
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The '''Augmentation Research Center''' (usually given as the acronym, '''ARC''') was a research group started by [[Douglas Engelbart]] at the [[SRI International|Stanford Research Institute]]. It did ground-breaking work in the areas of [[user interface]]s and [[application]]s.
  
 
Among their notable innovations were the invention of the [[mouse]], 'cut and pasting' of text blocks, and [[hypertext]].
 
Among their notable innovations were the invention of the [[mouse]], 'cut and pasting' of text blocks, and [[hypertext]].

Revision as of 13:41, 7 October 2023

The Augmentation Research Center (usually given as the acronym, ARC) was a research group started by Douglas Engelbart at the Stanford Research Institute. It did ground-breaking work in the areas of user interfaces and applications.

Among their notable innovations were the invention of the mouse, 'cut and pasting' of text blocks, and hypertext.

Further reading

  • Thierry Bardini, Bootstrapping: Douglas Engelbart, Coevolution, and the Origins of Personal Computing, Stanford University Press, 2000
  • John Markoff, What the Dormouse Said: How the Sixties Counterculture Shaped the Personal Computer Industry, Viking Press, 2005 - covers much else, but has good coverage of the history of ARC, and work there
  • M. Mitchell Waldrop, The Dream Machine, Viking Penguin, 2001 - Licklider, who had been thinking along the same lines, was an early backer of ARC