A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
The mouse is a potent prosthetic. When placed in front of our desktop we do not even have to think consciously about reaching for it. Mark Wigley's eulogy to this seemingly humble but transformative technology highlights the power that such a discrete device can have on the human ecosystem, providing a seamless interface between body and brain that is still only to be dreamt of in architecture. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
The mouse is a potent prosthetic. When placed in front of our desktop we do not even have to think consciously about reaching for it. Mark Wigley's eulogy to this seemingly humble but transformative technology highlights the power that such a discrete device can have on the human ecosystem, providing a seamless interface between body and brain that is still only to be dreamt of in architecture. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
The Architecture of the Mouse
Wigley, Mark (author)
Architectural Design ; 80 ; 50-57
2010-11-01
8 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
remote controls , ‘As We Think’ , local interfaces , ‘handheld’ , buttons define the space we occupy , micro movements , Organic and inorganic circuits , Douglas Engelbart , Herman Miller , ‘augmented architect at work’ , ‘Man‐Computer Symbiosis’ , US Air Force Office of Scientific Research , micro‐switches , Apple , Augmentation Research Center , Memex , Vannevar Bush , Marshal McLuhan , moment that technology becomes part of biology , ‘Extending Man's Intellect’ , JCR Licklider , Microsoft , touchscreen , Bill English , keyboards and keypads
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