Artifact Details

Title

Network visionary Robert W. Taylor in conversation with NPR’s Guy Raz

Catalog Number

102702317

Type

Moving image

Description

Event abstract: Bob Taylor planned to be a Methodist minister like his father. Instead, he became an evangelist for an idea that changed the world: easy-to-use computers that talk to each other. "I was never interested in the computer as a mathematical device, but as a communication device," Taylor said. Taylor's interests -- and his genius for getting them funded -- helped develop computer networking, the personal computer, and many of the other technologies that drove the global computer revolution.

As director of ARPA's Information Processing Techniques office, Taylor funded Doug Engelbart, inventor of the mouse and co-inventor of many of the aspects of computing we take for granted today from clickable links to multiple windows. Taylor then hired networking pioneer Larry Roberts to oversee the ARPAnet project -- the first major experiment in general computer networking, and a key ancestor of the Internet.

As founder of the Xerox PARC Computer Systems Laboratory, Taylor went on to recruit and manage the hot-tempered brigade of geniuses who developed the set of features so familiar on our Mac and Windows machines today, including the graphical user interface, Ethernet and laser printing. He also oversaw important work in connecting networks to each other.

In this candid and far-ranging discussion with Guy Raz, the weekend host of NPR's All Things Considered, Taylor shares his life stories and discusses the process of fostering innovation and the evolution of radical technologies.

Date

2010-05-13

Participants

Raz, Guy, Speaker
Taylor, Robert (Bob) W., Speaker

Publisher

Computer History Museum

Place of Publication

Mountain View, California, US

Format

DVCAM

Category

Lecture

Subject

Taylor, Robert (Bob) W.; Networking; ARPA; ARPANET; Engelbart, Douglas; Vietnam War; Xerox PARC; Internet; Ethernet (Local area network system); GUI; laser printer; Windows technology; Silicon Valley

Collection Title

CHM Lecture Collection

Series Title

Net@40

Credit

Produced by Computer History Museum

Lot Number

X5776.2010