Personal computing in the 21st century

G. Starkweather
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Abstract

Ever since the dawn of the digital computer, invention, innovation, and creativity have been a hallmark of the industry. The mainframe computer seemed for a while to be the real player with experts or at least highly trained professionals operating these large and expensive machines. Most users were allowed to see them through glass windows but "hands on" was a rare opportunity. In 1972, the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC), built a remarkable personal computer named the ALTO. Except for the visionaries at PARC and a few others, most people considered the personal computer a mere curiosity in this early period. Today, the personal computer has become a tool that very few imagined. What might be yet to come.While prognosticating about the future is a risky endeavor at best, perhaps we can obtain a look ahead with a straightforward review of the current status of personal computing. We will look at operating systems, application software and peripherals, however, the real goal of this talk is to see what the user interface, tools and interactions with this future computing environment might be or perhaps even should be. Will we still be using continuing variations of Doug Englebart's mouse in 2020 or might something new and much more advanced emerge? How might users seamlessly deal with terabytes of storage? How might multi-user environments be used and could multi-OS machines be an economic and generally available personal computing environment? Are there user experience issues that are critical in multi-OS environments? How might the user's display be different from today? Will tomorrow's displays be larger, have a significantly higher pixel density, be much more paper-like, etc.? Might electronic printers and their requisite paper output still be with us by 2025, for example? Will home and neighborhood network resources finally be a powerful ally of the computing environment? Many exciting opportunities and questions beg for answers and industry insight.This talk will attempt to peer into the near future to see what we might expect of the personal computing environment based on what we can extrapolate from current experience and technology directions. While the exactitude of such projections may be limited, taken as a whole, there is perhaps much that can be learned from such an exercise. Why do this? Charles Kettering, the great automotive inventor was asked why he spent so much time planning and thinking about the future. He wisely replied, "Because I am going to spend the rest of my life there." Thirty years ago, very few could have imagined all the wonderful things that personal computing has enabled. Perhaps we have just begun our exciting journey.
21世纪的个人电脑
自从数字计算机出现以来,发明、创新和创造力一直是这个行业的标志。在一段时间内,大型计算机似乎是真正的玩家,专家或至少是训练有素的专业人员操作这些大型昂贵的机器。大多数用户可以透过玻璃窗看到它们,但“亲自动手”是一个难得的机会。1972年,施乐帕洛阿尔托研究中心(PARC)制造了一台非凡的个人电脑,名为Alto。除了帕洛阿尔托研究中心和其他一些有远见的人之外,大多数人在早期都认为个人电脑只是一种新奇的东西。今天,个人电脑已经成为一种很少有人能想象到的工具。什么可能还没有到来。虽然预测未来充其量是一项冒险的努力,但也许我们可以通过对个人计算机当前状态的直接回顾来展望未来。我们将关注操作系统、应用软件和外围设备,然而,这次演讲的真正目的是了解未来计算环境的用户界面、工具和交互可能是什么样子,或者甚至应该是什么样子。到2020年,我们还会继续使用道格·恩格尔巴特(Doug Englebart)的鼠标变体,还是会出现更先进的新东西?用户如何无缝地处理tb级的存储?如何使用多用户环境?多操作系统机器能否成为一种经济且普遍可用的个人计算环境?在多操作系统环境中是否存在关键的用户体验问题?用户的显示将与今天有何不同?未来的显示器是否会更大,像素密度是否会显著提高,是否会更像纸?例如,到2025年,电子打印机及其所需的纸张输出是否还会存在?家庭和社区网络资源最终会成为计算环境的强大盟友吗?许多令人兴奋的机会和问题需要答案和行业洞察力。这次演讲将尝试展望不久的将来,看看我们对个人计算环境的期望是什么,这是基于我们从目前的经验和技术方向推断出来的。虽然这种预测的准确性可能有限,但作为一个整体,也许可以从这种工作中学到很多东西。为什么要这样做?有人问伟大的汽车发明家查尔斯·凯特林(Charles Kettering),他为什么花那么多时间规划和思考未来。他明智地回答说:“因为我将在那里度过我的余生。”30年前,很少有人能想象到个人电脑带来的如此美妙的事情。也许我们的激动人心的旅程才刚刚开始。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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