Google – AFP, 4 July 2013
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A vintage
mouse is displayed at the Computer History Museum on
January 19, 2011 in
Mountain View, California. (Getty Images/AFP/File,
Justin Sullivan)
|
LOS ANGELES
— Douglas Engelbart, who revolutionized computing by inventing the mouse, died
in California on Tuesday at the age of 88, the institute bearing his name said
Wednesday.
Born in
Oregon, Engelbart studied electrical engineering and computer sciences in the
1950s before joining the Stanford Research Institute.
There, he
and his team worked on a number of concepts that have entered the computer
mainstream, such as email, video conferencing, hypertext links and ARPAnet, the
precursor of the Internet.
But he is
best remembered for the mouse, which in its original incarnation was a wood box
with two metal wheels and was granted a patent in 1970.
He had
publicly used it two years earlier during a video conference in San Francisco
before some 1,000 people -- an event that became known as "the mother of
all demos."
Engelbart
had a total of 21 patents to his name. In 2000 he was presented with the National
Medal of Technology, the tech industry's highest honor.

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