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  1. Watch the 2018 panel. 50th Anniversary Event: December 9, 2018 3b4. Event: Demo @50 Symposium (2018) Watch the 2018 Panel Discusssion with members of Doug's research team Jeff Rulifson, Don Andrews, Martin Hardy, Charles Irby, and Christina Engelbart in session titled "The Making of The Demo: The ARC Team Remembers".

  2. From Doug's Lab 3b. Celebrate the 50th Anniversary of this landmark Demo SEQUEL with footage, memorabilia and fun facts below. FROM THE ARCHIVE. 1969 Engelbart Demo - ASIS Conference (1/3) Watch Doug introduce basics (6:00) Experience the demo interactively.

  3. Douglas Engelbart was born on January 30, 1925 in Oregon, USA. He is most well known as the inventor of the computer mouse. At SRI International, Engelbart was the primary force behind the design and development of the On-Line System, or NLS. He and his team at the Augmentation Research Center (ARC, the lab he founded at SRI) developed computer ...

  4. See Logitech's press release, blog post with links to press, and their billionth mouse celebration page with links to press kits filled with fun facts and timelines. The event coincided with our 40th anniversary celebration of Doug's landmark demo, titled "Engelbart and the Dawn of Interactive Computing". Enjoy the following timeline from ...

  5. Watch the 2018 panel. 50th Anniversary Event: December 9, 2018 3b4. Event: Demo @50 Symposium (2018) Watch the 2018 Panel Discusssion with members of Doug's research team Jeff Rulifson, Don Andrews, Martin Hardy, Charles Irby, and Christina Engelbart in session titled "The Making of The Demo: The ARC Team Remembers".

  6. Dec 29, 2021 · 17 Surprisingly Interesting Computer Mouse Facts You Need To Know. The first-ever computer mouse was invented by Douglas Engelbart. The first prototype was made of a box with two wheels at the bottom. It was rocked and tilted to make vertical and horizontal straight lines.

  7. Doug's Demo Sequel: 1969 0. Not long after Doug Engelbart's ground-breaking Mother of All Demos in December 1968, he and his team demonstrated their research at another conference in San Francisco – the 32nd Annual Meeting of the American Society for Information Science (ASIS), in October 1969.

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