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HCI History. Key people, events, ideas and paradigm shifts.
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HCI History Key people, events, ideas and paradigm shifts This material has been developed by Georgia Tech HCI faculty, and continues to evolve. Contributors include Gregory Abowd, Jim Foley, Diane Gromala, Elizabeth Mynatt, Jeff Pierce, Colin Potts, Chris Shaw, John Stasko, and Bruce Walker. This specific presentation also borrows from James Landay and Jason Hong at UC Berkeley. Comments directed to foley@cc.gatech.edu are encouraged. Permission is granted to use with acknowledgement for non-profit purposes. Last revision: January 2004.
The Evolution of HCI • Series of technological advances lead to and are sometimes facilitated by a • Series of paradigm shifts that in turn are created by a • Series of key people and events
People Vannevar Bush J. R. (Lick) Licklider Ivan Sutherland Doug Engelbart Alan Kay Ted Nelson Nicholas Negroponte Mark Weiser Jaron Lanier Key People
ENIAC - World's first computer, 1943 From IBM Archives.
Mark I paper tape readers, 1944 Program loops were actual loops From Harvard University Cruft Photo Laboratory.
IBM SSEC (1948) • From IBM Archives. Filled about ½ a football field
Stretch - IBM’s first transistorized supercomputer, 1961 From IBM Archives.
Context - Computing in 1960s • Computers still primarily used by scientists and engineers • Computers were primarily used with batch processing • No “interaction” between operator and computer after starting the run • Punch cards, tapes for input,paper printouts for output Vacuum Tube Jason Hong / James Landay, UC Berkeley
J. R. Licklider, 1960 • Postulated “man-computer symbiosis” • Couple human brains and computing machinestightly to revolutionizeinformation handling
Pre-requisite to man-computer symbiosis • Time sharing of computers among many users • Electronic I/O • Interactive real time system for information processing and programming
Intermediate and long-term goals • Combination of speech recognition, hand-printed character recognition & light-pen editing • natural language understanding • speech recognition of arbitrary computer users • heuristic programming
Ivan Sutherland, 1963 • SketchPad - 1963 PhD thesis at MIT • Hierarchy - pictures & subpictures • Master picture with instances (ie, OOP) • Constraints • Icons • Copying • Light pen input device • Recursive operations