Douglas Englebart was the inventor who helped to develop much of the technology that we are using right now: the mouse, GUI, hypertext, networked computers.
His legendary “mother of all demos” showcased these and other technologies way back in 1968. If ever there was a moment when someone could say “I have seen the future and it works !” this was it.
And, FYI, you can report your own post for something like this, instead of waiting for a mod to wander by – which may or may not happen. (We don’t read every post in every thread in every forum.)
RIP, Mr. Engelbart. You’re in the pantheon of those who have impacted civilization greatly w/o the vast majority of the people you’ve influenced knowing who you are.
Like Mother Theresa being overshadowed by dying a few days after Lady Diana, it’s your loss to have died in the same week some random dog got shot.
The article on Slashdot contained a pretty good summarization of his impact:
When you consider that he introduced most of that in the same demo, you begin to get some idea of his impact on the world we now live in. At the time, it was like his saucer had crashed on this planet, and he was giving us a tour.
After he retired from his regular career, Logitech hired him (and his daughter) - just to give him a place to hang his hat. (He didn’t get rich off of his ideas because he didn’t own them.)
It gave everyone a chance to see living history walking around. His office was just down the hall from my team.
Specifically, he didn’t patent them. Not really the same thing. He was a bit like Dr. Salk in that way.
That sounds decent enough of them - build a multi-billion-dollar industry on a man’s brilliance, it is literally the very least one can do. Not to be too hard on Logitech specifically, but if he made a penny on every mouse sold, he would have had a very nice retirement indeed.