"The possibilities we are
pursuing involve an integrated man-machine working relationship, where close,
continuous interaction with a computer avails the human of radically changed
information-handling and -portrayal skills," he wrote in a 1961 research
proposal at SRI. His work, he argued with typical conviction, "competes in
social significance with research toward harnessing thermonuclear power,
exploring outer space, or conquering cancer."
Douglas C. Engelbart, a
technologist who conceived of the computer mouse and laid out a vision of an
Internet decades before others brought those ideas to the mass market, died on
Tuesday night.

He was 88. Engelbart had suffered
from poor health and died peacefully in his sleep, his daughter, Christina,
told friends in an email. Engelbart arrived at his crowning moment relatively
early in his career, on a winter afternoon in 1968, when he delivered an
hour-long presentation containing so many far-reaching ideas that it would be
referred to decades later as the "mother of all demos."
Speaking before an audience of
1,000 leading technologists in San Francisco, Engelbart, a computer scientist
at the Stanford Research Institute, showed off a cubic device with two rolling
discs called an "X-Y position indicator for a display system."
It was the mouse's public debut.
Engelbart then summoned, in real-time, the image and voice of a colleague 30
miles away. That was the first videoconference. And he explained a theory of
how pages of information could be tied together using text-based links, an idea
that would later form the bedrock of the Web's architecture.
At a time when computing was
largely pursued by government researchers or hobbyists with a countercultural
bent, Engelbart never sought or enjoyed the explosive wealth that would later
become synonymous with Silicon Valley success.
He never received any royalties for
the mouse, for instance, which SRI patented and later licensed to Apple
Computer. He was intensely driven instead by a belief that computers could be
used to augment human intellect. In talks and papers, he described with zeal
and bravado a vision of a society in which groups of highly productive workers
would spend many hours a day collectively manipulating information on shared
computers.
By 2000, Engelbart had won
prestigious accolades including the National Medal of Technology and the Turing
Award. He lived in comfort in Atherton, a leafy suburb near Stanford
University. At the same time, he wrestled with his fade into obscurity even as
technology entrepreneurs like Steve Jobs and Bill Gates built fortunes off of
the personal computer and became celebrity billionaires by realizing some of
his early ideas. In 2005, he told Tom Foremski, a technology journalist, that
he felt the last two decades of his life had been a "failure" because
he could not receive funding for his research or "engage anybody in a dialogue."
Douglas Carl Engelbart was born on
Jan. 30, 1925 in Portland to a radio repairman father and a homemaker mother.
He enrolled at Oregon State University, but was drafted into the U.S. Navy and
shipped to the Pacific before he could graduate. He resolved to change the
world as a computer scientist after coming across a 1945 article by Vannevar
Bush, the head of the US Office of Scientific Research, while scouring a Red
Cross library in a native hut in the Philippines, he told an interviewer years
later.
After returning to the United
States to complete his degree, Engelbart took a teaching position at the
University of California, Berkeley, after Stanford declined to hire him because
his research seemed too removed from practical applications. He took a job at
SRI in 1957, and by the early-1960s Engelbart led a team had begun to seriously
investigate tools for interactive computing.
After coming back from a computer
graphics conference in 1961, Engelbart sketched a design and tasked Bill
English, an engineering colleague, to carve a prototype out of wood.
Engelbart's team considered other designs, including a device that would be
affixed to the underside of a table and controlled by the knee, but the desktop
mouse won out. SRI would later license the technology for $40,000 to Apple,
which released the first commercial mouse with its Lisa computer in 1983.
By the late 1970s, Engelbart's
research group was acquired by a company called Tymshare, and he struggled to
secure funding for his work or return to the same heights of influence. In his
later years he founded a management seminar program called the Bootstrap
Institute with his daughter Christina. He is survived by Karen O'Leary
Engelbart, his second wife, and four children: Gerda, Diana, Christina and
Norman. His wife Ballard died in 1997.
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