Personal computing today is shaped by Douglas Engelbarts vision
Anyone who has ever used a mouse to click into a virtual world owes gratitude to Douglas Engelbart,the father of the mouse and so much more,who died at 88 on July 2. Engelbart was a true visionary in an industry where the label is thrown around all too easily. Apart from inventing the mouse,Engelbart was instrumental in designing the graphical user interface GUI,which we can all be grateful to for liberating us from the intimidating tedium of command line inputs,and also bootstrapping the ARPAnet,more famously known as the precursor to the internet.
Engelbarts imagination shaped the way we interact with computers. He saw computing as a way to augment human intellect,and provided many of the tools so necessary for the exploration of ideas in a way that aids collective intelligence the ability of teams to develop solutions that might elude individuals a notion he passionately believed in.