, as designed by
Bill English from
Douglas Engelbart's sketches Engelbart had assembled a team of computer engineers and programmers at his
Augmentation Research Center (ARC) located in Stanford University's
Stanford Research Institute (SRI) in the early 1960s. His idea was to free computing from merely being about number crunching and for it to become a tool for communications and information-retrieval. He wanted to turn
Vannevar Bush's idea for a
Memex machine into reality, where a machine used interactively by one person could "augment" their intelligence. Over the course of six years, with the funding help of both
NASA and
ARPA, his team went about putting together all the elements that would make such a computer system a reality. At the urging of ARPA's director,
Robert Taylor, the NLS would make its first public appearance at the 1968 Fall Joint Computer Conference in
San Francisco's
Civic Auditorium. The conference session was presented under the title
A research center for augmenting human intellect. Approximately 1,000 computer professionals were in attendance in the auditorium to witness the presentation. Notable attendees in the audience included
Alan Kay,
Charles Irby and
Andy van Dam, as well as
Bob Sproull. Engelbart, with the help of his geographically distributed team (including
Bill Paxton), with
Bill English directing the presentation's technical elements, demonstrated NLS's functions. The presentation used an
Eidophor video projector that allowed the video output from the NLS computer to be displayed on a large high screen so the audience could see what Engelbart was doing. The Augment researchers also created two customized homemade
modems at 1200
baudhigh-speed for 1968linked via a
leased line to transfer data from the computer workstation keyboard and mouse at the Civic Auditorium to their Menlo Park headquarters'
SDS-940 computer. In order to provide live two-way video between the lab and the conference hall, two
microwave links were used. English also commanded a
video switcher that controlled what was displayed on the big screen. The camera operator in Menlo Park was
Stewart Brand, who at the time was a non-computer person, best known as the editor of the
Whole Earth Catalog. Stewart Brand advised Engelbart and the team about how to present the demo. Engelbart got to know Stewart Brand when they experimented with
LSD at the same lab. During the 90-minute presentation, Engelbart used his mouse prototype to move around the screen, highlight text, and resize windows. This was the first time that an integrated system for manipulating text onscreen was presented publicly. At separate times, his Augment associates
Jeff Rulifson and
Bill Paxton appeared in another portion of the screen to help edit the text remotely from ARC. While they were editing they could see each other's screen, talk and see each other as well. He further demonstrated that clicking on underlined text would then link to another page of information, demonstrating the concept of
hypertext. When he finished the demonstration, the audience gave him a standing ovation. To further demonstrate the system, a separate room was set aside so that attendees could take a closer look at the NLS workstations and ask Engelbart questions. One last notion is that of Engelbart's NLS system. As Fred Turner stated in his book
From Counterculture to Cyberculture: Engelbart promulgated a philosophy of 'bootstrapping', in which each experimental transformation of the socio-technical system that was the NLS would feed back into the system itself, causing it to evolve (and presumably to improve). ==Influence==