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Explore the evolution of control devices, from binary punch cards and paper tapes to keyboards, mice, touchscreens, and gesture-based interfaces. Discover how these interfaces have revolutionized human-machine interaction.
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Card from a Fortran program: Z(1) = Y + W(1) Binary punch card IBM 711 Punched card reader IBM Keypunch Machine 026
A roll of punched tape One type of paper tape punch Paper tape relay operation at FAA's Honolulu flight service station in 1964
Engelbart's Workstation, 1966 - Keyset, keyboard, monitor, mouse
NLS (1968) This segment discusses control devices, the keyboard and mouse. "I don't know why we call it a mouse. It started that way and we never changed it." The operation principles of the mouse are explained with Bill Paxton being video patched in from SRI in Menlo Park. Doug discusses the tracking spot on the screen and relation between mouse movements and attention focused on the tracking spot.
NLS (1968) Chord Key Set provides a five-finger equivalent of what can be done with the keyboard. Combinations of keystrokes can launch different operations.
The Dynabook's original illustration in Alan C. Kay's 1972 paper
Screenshot of a sample Bash session, taken on an old release of Gentoo Linux.
Screenshot of Windows PowerShell 1.0, running under Windows Vista
Screenshot of the MATLAB 7.4 command-line interface and GUI.
Rank Xerox brochure for 8010/40 system introduced in 1981 Xerox Star 8010
The first CAVE was developed in the Electronic Visualization Laboratory at University of Illinois at Chicago and was announced and demonstrated at the 1992 SIGGRAPH
Virtualisation of human-machine interfaces using touch technology (Charalampos Psarros)