gfkdsgn, to CrystalsHashtags German
@gfkdsgn@burma.social avatar

1973 the first digital art contest was going on between Richard "Dick" Shoup and Damon Rarey at the SuperPaint computer system. While Damon was ahead in the competition, in the aftermath all graphic designer have won.

Shoup's computer used a pixel framebuffer with a graphic tablet and icon based menu with HSB color selection. IT was proof of the pixel concept like was for a decade earlier. paved the way for 's , over and until @art became with @GIMP and professional like @Krita

This is a tribute to them and what their achievements made possible for all of us. Needles to mention again that vector designs and layouts are made in with @inkscape, isn't it?

1973 SuperPaint was the first pixel-based image editing computer system with framebuffer and menu icons
Original photo of SuperPaint with menthol cigarettes next to the terminal and contest stats on the chalkboard.

cloudguy, to random

Thankfully the press can thank Larry Tesler and Tim Mott for inventing Cut and Paste at Xerox Labs in late 1974.

Because without them they'd be having to type Þórkötlustaðahverfi a lot this week while the Icelandic volcano threatens to explode.

teajaygrey,
@teajaygrey@rap.social avatar

@cloudguy I'm more or less certain that NLS (oNLine System) from Doug Engelbart's ARC (Augmentation Research Center) group at SRI (Stanford Research Institute) already demonstrated copying and pasting of text in the 1968 "Mother of All Demos".

Salient excerpt here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6rKUf9DWRI&t=90s

Complete (one hour 40 minute) recording of the Mother of All Demos here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJDv-zdhzMY&

However, it is true, if perhaps lesser known, that Xerox's PARC had a cross-licensing arrangement with SRI and SAIL (Stanford Artificial Intelligence Lab).

Lamentably, due to Hollywood BS such as Pirates of Silicon Valley, many (almost all?) in pop culture erroneously attribute inventions to PARC which were previously invented under Engelbart's team and elsewhere.

For example even earlier, Ivan Sutherland's Sketchpad (movie clip below from 1962, doctoral thesis completed in 1963) had copying and pasting graphical objects and object inheritance, a clip here narrated by Alan Kay (who was a student of Sutherland and also later worked at PARC):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=495nCzxM9PI

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