Douglas Engelbart, Visionary and Pioneer in Collaborative Computing, Leads Colloquium At Stanford University.FREMONT, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 16, 1999-- Discussion Series Will Help Organizations Prepare for an Environment of Increasing Urgency and Complexity The Bootstrap See boot. (operating system, compiler) bootstrap - To load and initialise the operating system on a computer. Normally abbreviated to "boot". From the curious expression "to pull oneself up by one's bootstraps", one of the legendary feats of Baron von Munchhausen. Institute today announced that Dr. Douglas Engelbart (person) Douglas Engelbart - Douglas C. Engelbart, the inventor of the mouse. On 1968-12-09, Douglas C. Engelbart and the group of 17 researchers working with him in the Augmentation Research Center at Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park, California, USA, presented a , pioneer in collaborative computing, will lead a 10-week colloquium col·lo·qui·um n. pl. col·lo·qui·ums or col·lo·qui·a 1. An informal meeting for the exchange of views. 2. An academic seminar on a broad field of study, usually led by a different lecturer at each meeting. at Stanford University Stanford University, at Stanford, Calif.; coeducational; chartered 1885, opened 1891 as Leland Stanford Junior Univ. (still the legal name). The original campus was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. David Starr Jordan was its first president. on how nations and their organizations, including corporations, can evolve to manage the unprecedented rate and scale of change in today's society. Dr. Douglas Engelbart is best known as the inventor of the computer mouse, although his most significant work to date is leadership of the team that developed collaborative computing and the oNLine System (NLS NLS - Native Language System ), the first hypertext system Noun 1. hypertext system - a database management system that allows strings of text (`objects') to be processed as a complex network of nodes that are linked together in an arbitrary way . The colloquium, "An In-depth Look at the Unfinished Revolution," will be held Thursdays from January 6 through March 9, 2000 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. as a program of the Stanford Center for Professional Development. Leaders from government, business, technology and academia will discuss topics pertinent to the challenges of change, while a worldwide audience can join via live web casts at http://scpd.stanford.edu/pd/engelbart/engelbart.html or view broadcasts over the Stanford Instructional Television Instructional television (ITV) is a type of television program that is designed for use in schools. Programs on instructional television may be less than one half hour long (generally 15 minutes in length) to help their integration into the classroom setting. Network (SITN SITN Stanford Instructional Television Network SITN Ships in the Night (networking) SITN SPAWAR listed as Secondary Information Transfer Node ). Archival replays will be available shortly after the live sessions. "Many of the changes in today's highly interconnected and interdependent world are improving the way we live and work, but the unprecedented rate and scale of change is also leading to massive challenges and opportunities on a global level," said Dr. Engelbart, founder and director of the Bootstrap Institute. "The colloquium gives us a forum to engage in lively dialogue on how we can improve our abilities to leverage our collective IQ." Dr. Engelbart foresees that the concept of collective IQ and its improvement need to become a core focus and challenge for society. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Dr. Engelbart, although much attention is now given to the challenges and opportunities of e-business, the organizations, regions and countries that adopt the most effective, large-scale strategy toward becoming collectively smarter will enable broad improvements throughout society and commerce, including e-business. The concept of high collective IQ will, therefore, vitally affect every aspect of governance, security, economy, education, health, business and other societal services. The colloquium extends topics introduced one year ago on December 9, 1998, at a Stanford University symposium where speakers and guests honored Dr. Engelbart on the 30th anniversary of his landmark demonstration of the oNLine System (NLS). The remarkable 1968 demonstration inspired the world with the possibilities of using computers to augment human capabilities. Last year's symposium, "Engelbart's Unfinished Revolution," sparked new interest in aspects of Dr. Engelbart's unique work and vision that have not yet been understood or realized. During the new colloquium, "An In-depth Look at the Unfinished Revolution," Dr. Engelbart will explain his vision on how nations and their organizations can develop their improvement infrastructure to cope with the challenges of change. The colloquium is designed to generate awareness of large-scope issues and opportunities, to present a framework that can evolve a coherent improvement infrastructure and to examinelbart's work in collaborative technology and s Augmenting organizational capabilities -- ing it all together, next steps
Due to limited seating, in-person attendance to the colloquium is
on a first-come, first-served basis to confirmed registrants. Press
and dignitaries are invited to attend a reception at Stanford
University immediately following the conclusion of the first session
at 7 p.m. on January 6. Those interested in attending the colloquium
and reception should contact Mary Coppernoll by e-mail at
coppernoll@bootstrap.org. Additional information is available online
at http://www.bootstrap.org/colloquium.
About Dr. Douglas Engelbart
Primarily known as an inventor, Dr. Engelbart is now generally
recognized as one of the most important visionaries of the 20th
century. Many of the tools that shape the way we work and interact,
such as the personal computer, the Internet, open systems and
user-friendly interfaces, have been significantly influenced by work
done or led by Dr. Engelbart in the 1960s and 1970s. His work has been
driven by a vision for making the world a better place, including
improved collaboration and knowledge sharing, and improved strategies
for organizational and societal transformation -- an approach that is
all the more relevant in today's fast-changing, interdependent world.
Dr. Engelbart has received a number of prestigious honors, including the following: -- 1999 IEEE John Von Neumann Medal The IEEE John von Neumann Medal was established by the IEEE Board of Directors in 1990 and may be presented annually "for outstanding achievements in computer-related science and technology. -- 1999 Franklin Institute's Benjamin Franklin Medal This article is about the RSA Benjamin Franklin Medal. For the medal awarded by the Franklin Institute, see Franklin_Institute#The_Benjamin_Franklin_Awards. The RSA Benjamin Franklin Medal in Computer and Cognitive Science cognitive science Interdisciplinary study that attempts to explain the cognitive processes of humans and some higher animals in terms of the manipulation of symbols using computational rules. -- 1999 New Jersey Institute of Technology, Honorary Doctor of Science -- 1999 SRI International (company) SRI International - One of the world's largest contract research firms. Founded in 1946 in conjuction with Stanford University as the Stanford Research Institute, they later became fully independent and were incorporated as a non-profit organisation under U.S. Weldon B. Gibson Achievement Award -- 1998 Inductee, National Inventors Hall Of Fame The National Inventors Hall of Fame is an organization that honors important inventors from the whole world who have lodged a domestic American patent. The only prerequisite of induction is being named an inventor on a US patent. Posthumous induction is allowed. -- 1998 Ronald H. Brown American Innovator Awards, U.S. Department of Commerce -- 1998 IEC (International Electrotechnical Commission, Geneva, Switzerland, www.iec.ch) An organization that sets international electrical and electronics standards founded in 1906. It is made up of national committees from over 60 countries. IEC - International Electrotechnical Commission Fellow Award from the International Engineering Consortium -- 1998 Oregon State Engineering Hall of Fame -- 1997 ACM (Association for Computing Machinery, New York, www.acm.org) A membership organization founded in 1947 dedicated to advancing the arts and sciences of information processing. In addition to awards and publications, ACM also maintains special interest groups (SIGs) in the computer field. A.M. Turing Award The A.M. Turing Award is given annually by the Association for Computing Machinery to a person selected for contributions of a technical nature made to the computing community. The contributions should be of lasting and major technical importance to the computer field. -- 1997 Lemelson-MIT $500,000 Prize
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Dr. Engelbart has authored more than 25 papers and generated 20
patents, including the patent for the mouse. Other pioneering firsts
from his laboratory at SRI International (then called the Stanford
Research Institute) include two-dimensional display editing, in-file
object addressing, linking, hypermedia, outline processing, flexible
view control, multiple windows, cross-file editing, integrated
hypermedia e-mail, hypermedia publishing, document version control,
shared-screen teleconferencing, computer-aided meetings,
context-sensitive help, distributed client-server architecture,
uniform command syntax and protocols for virtual terminals.
About the Bootstrap Institute
The Bootstrap Institute's mission is to help organizations
transform into high-performance organizations. The Institute targets
the organization's collective IQ and its capacity to improve as the
points of greatest leverage for continuing survival and success. By
addressing the improvement strategies enabling collaborative
technologies and co-evolving associated best practices, it offers a
comprehensive strategy and a range of services for bootstrapping
organizations into the 21st century.
The Bootstrap Institute is currently forming an alliance of
stakeholders -- including companies, improvement initiatives,
consortia, universities, government organizations, communities,
regions and nations -- to address this grand challenge. The Bootstrap
Institute, located in Fremont, California, can be reached by phone at
510/713-3550 or online at http://www.bootstrap.org.
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