3.1 KiB
Birth of HCI
ENIAC (one of the first programmable, electronic computers) 1946, and the first six programmers: Kay McNulty, Betty Jennings, Betty Snyder, Marlyn Meltzer, Fran Bilas, and Ruth Lichterman
DEC PDP-8 and TI 980 (1960’s), PDP-8 is an octal computer (switches in three-bit configurations), TI 980 is a hexadecimal machine (4-bit configuration). Not interactive
Batch processing using punch cards, still not interactive (1950s -1970s)
IBM System/360 (mainframe computer in the 70s), Altair 8800 (one of the first home computers)
visicalc (Dan Bricklin 1979), and Apple II (1977)
Sutherland, Ivan Edward (January 1963). "Sketchpad: A man-machine graphical communication system, MIT press.
Sutherland, Ivan Edward (January 1963). "Sketchpad: A man-machine graphical communication system, MIT press.
1968 - “The Sword of Damocles” Sutherland, Ivan Edward (1968), “A head-mounted three dimensional display”
1968 - “The Sword of Damocles” Sutherland, Ivan Edward (1968), “A head-mounted three dimensional display”
1968 - “The Sword of Damocles” Sutherland, Ivan Edward (1968), “A head-mounted three dimensional display”
“The Mother of All Demos”, presented by Douglas Engelbart (1968) at (ACM/IEEE) Computer Society's Fall Joint Computer Conference See full demo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJDv-zdhzMY
“Dynabook” Alan C. Kay. (1972), “Personal Computer for Children of All Ages”
Apple Newton (1993) and Apple iPad (2010)
Graphical User Interface supporting “What You See Is What You Get” (WYSIWYG), the Desktop metaphor (files, folders, etc.), Xerox Parc/Xeroc Star
Graphical User Interface supporting “What You See Is What You Get” (WYSIWYG), the Desktop metaphor (files, folders, etc.), Xerox Parc/Xeroc Star
1992/93 - IBM Simon First smartphone Phone, pager, calculator, address book, fax machine, and e-mail device
Ramesh Raskar, Greg Welch, Matt Cutts, Adam Lake, Lev Stesin and Henry Fuchs (1998) "The Office of the Future : A Unified Approach to Image-Based Modeling and Spatially Immersive Displays,"
1981 - Steve Manns’s “Wearable Computing” Start of a series of prototypes for wearable computing, cyborgs, and mediated reality (-> Google Glass) www.wearcam.org, www.eyetap.org
Nokia N95 (2007) and Apple iPhone (2007)
Major innovations in HCI (Myers 1998)





















