Difference between revisions of "Augmentation Research Center"
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(A little bit about SRI-ARC.) |
(Key predecessor to the ground-breaking work done at PARC) |
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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. | 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]]. Ideas and people from ARC were key 'seeds' to the ground-breaking work done at [[Xerox PARC]]. |
The group had an [[ARPANET]] [[host]] called SRI-ARC, which was initially a [[KA10]]. It was running a [[TENEX]] variant called [[August]]. | The group had an [[ARPANET]] [[host]] called SRI-ARC, which was initially a [[KA10]]. It was running a [[TENEX]] variant called [[August]]. |
Revision as of 13:56, 25 December 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. Ideas and people from ARC were key 'seeds' to the ground-breaking work done at Xerox PARC.
The group had an ARPANET host called SRI-ARC, which was initially a KA10. It was running a TENEX variant called August.
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