[LOOKHERE] cute tablet - runs win XP - how about squeafiying it ?

PhiHo Hoang phiho.hoang at rogers.com
Thu Nov 7 14:28:01 UTC 2002


Hi,

    Would someone please call Microsoft to ask
    who is 'computer scientist Alan Key'
    (see quote below)

    Cheers,

    PhiHo.

http://www.microsoft.com/insider/opsystems/tabletpc_history.asp


<QUOTE>
    1960s: Earliest Pen Computing Developments

    1963: Ivan Sutherland of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
used the light pen to create engineering drawings directly on his TX-2
computer's CRT display. A giant machine even by the standards of the day-and
definitely not portable-the TX-2 is the first known machine to use pen
technology.

    1964: RAND Corporation introduced the first iteration of the portable
tablet computer with the Grafacon.2 Mostly handmade, this early tablet used
a pen-based input device that cost $18,000 to manufacture.

    1968:Computer scientist Alan Key described a computer that could be used
effortlessly by untrained users, which he called the Dynabook-a lightweight
device on which he envisioned a person could take notes and work
interactively with wireless communications.3
</QUOTE>

----- Original Message -----
From: "Alan Kay" <Alan.Kay at squeakland.org>
To: <squeak-dev at lists.squeakfoundation.org>
Sent: Wednesday, November 06, 2002 8:40 PM
Subject: Re: [LOOKHERE] cute tablet - runs win XP - how about squeafiying it
?


> The guts of all of these were designed by Chuck Thacker, the main HW
> guy of the original PARC team. Squeak runs really well on it -- we
> got an early look last year.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Alan
>
> -----
>
> At 1:44 AM +0100 11/7/02, Edmund Ronald wrote:
> >http://www.eweek.com/slideshow/0,3670,p=1&s=0&a=33365&po=2&i=1,00.asp
>
>
> --
>




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