Difference between revisions of "Alan Kay talk at UCLA CS Connection Lab"
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Revision as of 01:37, 27 February 2024
okay everyone um
 I'm here today with isan K we're at the UCLA
 connection lab uh with professor kleinrock and the rest
of our students here uh we are very lucky to have Alan
 who is presenting on a broad range of
 topics ranging from technology society and future research
 and I'll keep it short so
 uh Isen needs no further introduction I will let him begin right
 away thank you so
 much okay onward we
go so the way this started off is my
 long long friend uh
 Len kleinrock sent me an email
 saying would I do a talk
and I wasn't
sure
 says about the view of the current you know basically
 about everything most rewarding
 work in my life I'm 84
 years old guys
 and can I do it in just a few
 minutes and of course I said okay
 and uh the wonderful
 Jason gathered
 up a bunch of questions and
 I endeavored to look at all all of them
 and combine them in one way or another
but uh
 the short an answers here
 are uh is it
 still feasible today to do something like zorox Park and
 the answer is yes I don't know of
 anything like zorox Park in the
 computer realm of things
 uh they're all so goal
 oriented uh but I've there's
 a great Biology Institute funded by the
foundation called janelia labs
 in near Washington DC and there's the famous
 Max plank Institute and
see a little bit why I don't
 consider there's a lot with
 the same kind of spirit as ZX
as I'll say in the moment it wasn't zerox
 Park zerox Park was
 part of the much larger
 arpa uh research
committee and considered it it was just funded by
 Xerox because the department def had quit
 funding arpa the right way and put the D on and changed
 everything so we'll see about that
 in a minute and
 a short answer do I believe PE young people today
 have to solve a harder problem in requiring
 resources and my answer is yes
 absolutely it is much much harder
 as the businesses
 have moved in
 which started really strongly in the
80s after the inventions of personal Computing
 and uh P pervasive and local
 networking there was something to
 that could be and
 the and the gooey which
 open up the computer to the
rest
 sorry go ahead I I could hear people talking
 yeah um yes so
 it's much harder much much harder
 and
 there wasn't time to really answer
 these uh completely separately
 so I sort of wo them together
 and I
 like this one this is a recent one what are some
 of the most tragic illusions that adults
with that is the most flattering thing I've
 heard in years because it assumes I'm not an adult
 which I'm not
 uh number two was what did you guys being there at Xerox
 Park do for them
 and then there's this dot dot dot one
 which I did do a little prep on it but I
 left it to the end in case we run out of
 time because in 84 years
 uh I've had a lot of aha moments but
 um let's start off with number
 one this is part
 of the tragic Illusions
 what we're doing right now and what we do in most
 classrooms is to recapitulate
 something that happened 150,000 years ago
 which is a bunch of people gathering around a
 campfire listening to somebody
talk and just
 think about it for a second how crazy
 is it for me to be doing what I'm doing now
 this is why I sent a couple of papers along to read
 it's crazy to orally discuss
 ideas inventions that required reading and writing
and explain the
 oral medium is not good for what it
 the best of the stuff that we
do but
 we all have the same pink brains
 they love stories and so
 what this guy wants is a story
 and what I'm trying to do is
 to comply to tell stories about
 things that really aren't very good as
 stories and the problem was we're still basically
 the same uh species
 with the same pink brain that wants
tories and systems
 aren't stories I'm basically a systems
guy
 and if we take a look at what happened going back a few
 hundred thousand years human genetics
 yeah it's changed a little bit we
 some of us got to be able to digest milk
 and so forth
 and human
 ventions gradually took
 off and with modern
 theories about origins of languages
 a lot more of language seems to be an invention
 via culture than
 uh we thought in the past and then we
 have this problem which I hope you can see
 there because my little thing is
 blocking um
 our Collective wisdom
 started being informed by our inventions
 but it grew at a much slower rate because the
 inventions are uh various forms of
 technology including symbolic Technologies
they turned out to be really easy once we got the hang of
 it and so we've got this
 huge gap
 so we can turn the guy's spear into a Tomahawk
 missile we can increase his power of
 Destruction by a factor of a million
 and we could do something much much worse which is to
 turn him into a bureaucrat
 and create bureaucracy
 and bureaucracy has killed millions
 and millions more people than the worst Atomic
 weapons so
 this is a huge problem
 and education
something about it we'll talk about that a little bit
 later but think about it we
 just went through the inability of most
 of the population of the planet to not
 understand how viruses and diseases work
 that was botched almost
 everywhere and for
 the last 60 plus years we've been
 ignoring something smaller than a virus the CO2
which is gradually
 changing the entire planet that we live
 on so if you're looking for
 human wisdom it's not up to
 the scaling of what we've been able to
invent
 okay so cliff notes for human beings
 I'll do this quickly
but so we're basically
 Hamlet
 our minds are like theaters
 we're more theatrical than we think we treate
 create our treat our beliefs as reality
 that is the worst thing about human
beings and these theaters are tiny we can
 only think of a few things that once it's hard for us
 to take in larger
 things and if you look into biology
 we find out that most of our mind is not
 human and we're more non-human
 than we assume and we tend to react
 much more than actual thinking thinking actually had
 to be invented we grow up in
we were born into
 and that shapes so much of who we are and also
 how we look at the world our conclusions
 tend to be societal that's a
 disaster and we have
 not just one mind and
 really not just one brain we maybe have
 about 80
 different conglomerations of things that could be
 called brainlets
 uh we have a special set of ones
 shared with most animals which is learning
 by touching things we learn
seeing things we have a completely different set of
 knowledges from how things look
 and uh we have this
 symbolic mechanism
 which is both our
 uh down downfall and our
 Salvation so we're much
 more fragmented we only have one body
 but uh what we want
 actually conflicts
 internally so this is
 a a whole area that's really
 worthwhile studying especially in
 this age of computation and especially
 this area I'll leave it at
 that now let's go to the the
 second question is what did we ever do
Xerox anyway
 well we'll talk a little bit later about where zor
 Park came from but here are some of the things that
did so the uh first
 thing like a modern personal
 computer uh the the
 goey with icons and
pointing
 basically a way of
 uh dealing with symmetrical
 reading and writing that was also what you see
get what we have to call real oop today
 that we only called oop back then but it was
 a different than what is called to
 today and we did the laser
 printer which just for the engineers in the
 crowd the very first laser printer was a page
 a second which most people have never
 experien today at 500 pixels
 to the inch so that is a great
 story all by itself How Gary Starkweather
 did that uh
 the outline fonts and postcript the ethernet
 peer peer and client server and
 about half the internet
actually had its own internet which is called the park
 Universal packets uh
 it was spread all over the country and
 uh about I don't know
 half the general meetings
 that were held at UCLA especially
 were done by Park people some of whom
had already done some of the things that working at
 yeah the thing is is that
 all of these things came out of a particular
 community so we locked the claim we
 had eight and a half visible inventions and
 of course what's interesting about all of this
 is all the
technology that had to be invented that was uh
 invisible and according to Butler
 Lamson this was done
 uh with about 25 researchers over about five
 years these particular ones I'm showing
 here and the park
 park itself existed in the form it was for
 about 10 years so in
 total uh today's dollars
 here is like I don't know 15
 years ago or so when I made the slot
 so it was uh in
 dollars of 15 years ago it was about 10
 million dollars a year or about 100
 million to 120 million for the
 for the 10 years and park had four Labs
 so there was system science computer science
 Optical science and physical science
 so this is the total budget of
 Park and when I
 first did this slide of 15
 years years ago or so the return was about $35
 trillion to the world now
 I think it's up past 50 trillion
 or so and to get back to the question
 is uh
 oh and this is an important idea that the thing that confused
 people and Confused Xerox was if you can
these eight and a half inventions you see in
 in Industry it is the
 basis of the one of the main
 large Industries uh that we have
today
 now what about return to park well Park
 missed I mean zerks missed most of these
 but it doesn't matter because the return
 on the laser printer all by itself
 was about a factor of 200
 on the entire investment for park over the
ntire 10 years so
 Zer made billions and billions just
 from this one thing they missed the
 trillions but
 uh if you look at it from a positive direction
 thank goodness they're willing to fund
 people that no business person in their right mind would
 fund so we got what we
got now
 the real story here is that back in the 40s
 the Cold War started with the Russian AB
 bomb after World War II and that
 gave rise to a bunch
 of DOD funding which included Whirlwind
 which we'll talk about in a minute the
 sage air defense system
 we'll talk about in a minute and then in 57 Sputnik
 came along and that created arpa
 we'll talk about that in a minute and here are some
the things that arpa did
 up to the time when the Vietnam War and
 Congress decided to kill arpa funding
 for public domain
 Computing so you can look at these yourself
 so things like uh personal Computing
 uh computer Graphics
 packet switching that handsome guy in the patch packing
 switch switching thing on the the right is
 none other than Len
kleinrock looking very confident as we all were
 back then that led to the arpanet
 and that led to the internet
 and the first tablet was really
 good one that was done back in 1964 and
 then there was the engelbart system and so
 forth so park was
 actually set up
 because uh one of the
 uh Deputy directors of
 arpa
 ipto feared that this work was not
 going to be continued to some kind of fruition
so he started looking around and it happened that Xerox
 was looking around for a long range research
 lab and they got together and the
 the lab was put as far away from corporate
 headquarters as possible uh
 next to a university so it's either going to be Berkeley
 or Stanford they put it next to
 Stanford and um
 Park completely thought of itself as
 being part of the Opera Community almost every computer
 researcher there had been a graduate
 student at and had their degrees
 paid for by arpa and so forth so I never
 talk about Park without bringing in
larger context and in fact
 it the larger context was the reason that Park
 was able to do so many things
 with so few researchers there was
 all of this prior art available
 in the research community and the resch search
 Community also taught the grad students how to work
 together I'll talk about that in a
minute
 okay here's uh feedback from
world push back look at some
disly low
 like here are the
Heartbreakers on the other hand 100%
 of the internet 100% of the ethernet
 100% of the laser printer outline
 font pierer and all that stuff were accepted
 and this is in large part because there weren't
 good Solutions already out
here the
 50% on the PO modern personal computer
 is because the people who adapted
 this to the commercial World
 basically adapted it
 uh in its appearances they didn't
look any deeper uh
 most of the hackers in the 80s thought they knew
 how to program so their interest in doing
 really new ways of programming was very low so the least accepted
 thing was the way we did successful
 software at Park
 and some of the deepest
 ideas uh that our field has ever come up with
 were done by uh engelbart and his group
 and almost none of those have even
 be understood and you know if I were there and person
 what I always do is ask students
 what angelart did and they usually can't tell me
 and it's hard to find a student
 in fact let's do it right now just for the hell
 of it okay students
 can you hear me raise your
hand
okay let's see
 what do I want here
 yes so students
 please tell me anybody who's T
 typed e n g l B- a
 r t into Google
 raise your
hand
 I think one hand is Professor Clan rock well
 of course okay so
 this is basically being in
 being in physics being
 a physics major and uh stop being
Newton so this is not an
exaggeration think about
it and you know if you want some bitching from an old
 fart a lot of us back in the
 old days put out a lot of
 uh effort including Len in the
 room to get you guys personal
 computers which you have with you
 and to get you guys networks that can connect
 to things and to get you so you can be
 just a few characters and a mouse push
 away from satisfying your curiosity
 about the heroes of your own profession
 think about that and none of you have done
 that what do you think about
hat okay
 so let's now go quickly back again
 Russian a bomb
Whirlwind so
 this is just a few racks of
 Whirlwind at MIT was
 actually just a 16bit
 bit parallel real-time mini computer
 but it took this amount of space had about 5,000 vacuum
 tubes and the memory
 devices back around 1950
 were so bad for storage
 for Ram that
 uh it forced uh one of
 the
 uh the guy in the middle there
 Jay Forester to invent core memory
 which was the technology that let computers
 uh go commercial for the first
 time and the guy to his
 uh let's see to his left the
 guy who's uh
 standing behind them in the middle of the picture
 there Jay
 Everett
um
whoops oh now it's not letting me
I hate Zoom
okay
 sorry
 okay also with this
 was uh one of the earliest displays
 and uh Everett had
 had uh
actually
sorry ever had
 actually invented a way to point at the
 screen and this is the as far as
the first time there was computer
 graphics with a pointing
 device and they did this because
 the Cold War changed their original
 theory about what they were doing which was
 uh to make flight simulators
 uh and they were starting to lose their funding for
 that but uh the atomic bomb
 of the Russians got the military
 interested in whether you could hook a computer
 up to radar and track it and they were
 the first to do this and that
hey built back then morphed its way into the
 worldwide uh airplane
 tracking system that we used to
 day then the second phase of Whirlwind
 was to go
 all out and see if we could
 track Russian bombers
 before they could uh get to us
 and so they built these monstrous
 block houses out of concrete
 this is about the size they
 were bottom floor there is just the
power supply the second second floor here
 are two really big Q7
 computers with maybe 55,000
 vacuum tubes gang
 together uh they're really something
walk around in
 here's a block house so
 24 of these were built in the
US then up on the top
 floor were 100 to about
 150 graphic terminals
 with pointing devices for dealing with various
of information and
 here's what one row of them look
like so there are zillions
 of them and this is about maybe 1956
 57
now
 and they had a network wasn't
 a great Network it wasn't a packet switching
 network but they' gotten used to the idea
 that if you're going to build computers and have people
work together you better have a network and some
 way of doing that so this
 crowning Glory was just coming to fruition
 when the Russians decided oh
 well let's just shoot some
Rockets to show The Americans that we don't need to
 deliver bombs by a bomber we can
 you make icbms
 so this shocked the and
 Congress and they set up arpa
 Advanced research projects agency
 the director uh
 in the early 60s was Jack
 ruen and
 he decided to
 uh give this guy uh
 Jacob licklider known as lick
 some leftover money they had which
by DOD standards wasn't a lot but by computer computer
 standards it was millions
 and they they gave it to him because they liked him and you'll
 you'll get an idea about this
 soon and so here are the
 1960s directors of
 arpa not a military person among them these were all
 PhD
scientists and the four arpa
 computer research directors were all
 scientists and this is because
 the powers that set this up
 realized that having something like the military
 and something like congress
 with a dire threat
were trying to deal with would just botch things up
 still true today
 so but
 of course Congress ultimately control
 the budget but they didn't have
 much power because the Americans were were
 frightened of the Russians
 and so they weren't
 going to curtail military spending
 but people in Congress would say
 these words that everybody has heard Still today
 how is this relevant tell me why this work that you're doing is
 relevant to the Department of Defense and
 they would get push back from these
 scientist Jack would say that's not the right
 question to ask Bob spra Senior would say the
 right question to ask is how is this going to help the United
 States or this technology or our society or our
 culture generally holy
  Bob Taylor's remark
 was they would stand up to these guys
 and in a polite civilized way attack their
 myopia because these arpa directors were scientific
 Statesmen
 and Bob reflects we've had too few of those people
 in the job since then
and around 1966
 Charlie hersfield asked bobw what
 what do you want and Bob said uh this network
 is what I want to do and here's why
 and Charlie said
 okay and Bob's recollection that was a
15minute conversation
 Charlie asked how much money do you need and Bob said well a million
 dollars is so it's like seven or eight billion seven or eight
 million dollars today just to get it organized
 and uh herzfeld said
 okay and Bob's recollection was that there was
 no actual arpa paperwork order written or anything
 for months maybe even a year
 these people all trusted each other and
 did a lot of things very quickly this
 way now a key idea here if you can see
 him is that Bob
 Taylor uh after
 arpa went on to be the
 founder uh of the computer science
 research at Xerox Park so he was the
 connection as of course the computer science
 research park at Park was set up like
 the computer science research of
 arpa and so when we look at
 this we want to see
 what what did these people weigh back then
 think about this we have all
 these questions that we can't answer all of them today
 we can look at the first couple there and we can get a
 couple of samples of what they were saying
 so veva
 Bush uh pronounced the way
 Beaver is pronounced in New England beava
 beniva Bush who is president
 Rosevelt science advisor said
 in the 40s holy new forms of encyclopedias
 will appear readymade with a mesh
 of associative Trails running through them ready to be
 dropped into the mimics and they're Amplified so
 that got a lot of people
thinking Li glider said in a few years
the combination of humans and computers will think as no
 humans have ever thought
 before John McCarthy looked at
 the sage system and said every home will have one
and with an intelligent interface because
 he thought way McCarthy thought about it is well this
 is just like uh getting gas and Water
 and Electric power and so forth into a house
 it's a utility so every house
 will have a uh a terminal connected to a
 worldwide utility that was
 1958 that affected the work at MIT
 by uh Corby Fernando
 corbo Ivan suin
 the inventor of computer Graphics said a graphic input
 coupled to some kind of computation which
 is in turn coupled to a graphical output is a
 truly powerful tool for Education design
and angelart here said we can boost Mankind's capability
 for coping with complex urgent Problems
 by augmenting the collective IQ
 of groups not just augmenting people
 but augmenting
roups
 and I'm going to more concentrate more
 on these two but we'll get a look at a bit
 okay so what what with these guys
 looking for as far as people look was just
 looking for the best people Ivan was
 looking for people uh who could choose their own problems and
 methods Taylor's
 thought his job was to
 fix up the social environment so that when the
 no Lone Wolf scientists needed to cooperate
 they will and
 Larry uh said
 everybody understood the game
 here which was arpa
 ipto was allowed to help the country as long as it was helping
 the military and so what
 kind of people were they looking for this man right here is
my great-grandfather he's the first cat herder in our
family don't let anybody tell you it's
 easy anybody can hurt cattle
 holding together 10, half wild SS
 that's another thing all together
well you get you get the idea
 and so the real question here is what if only cats can do this
 stuff and adults don't
 get it adults are into command and control
 and command and control doesn't work with cats
 have a jar fill all the names of the toys we have
 sitting right next to us and we're going to take the jar one by
 one open up these toys all right would you like to go first
 piing something from the jar yes all right
 now it's on a spring I like
all
 it's inside this box right here
there's this little mouse on a spring is go up and
 down and cats are going to try to catch it all righty our cats
like having mouses but they keep on tearing them apart CU
 they're kind of vicious so got another one
 okay and this is the toy
mouse what is this
 what is this mysterious
George I think you get
 it gotta have some feel for what cats
 want so
 lick pointed out right at
 the beginning that great Visions are not the same as
 goals but they are the ultimate cat
oy so
 he stuck to this Vision which is not
 phrased as a goal he said computers are destined
 to become interactive intellectual
 amplifiers for everyone universally networked
 worldwide he did not know
 what this meant and in fact he was a psychologist
 not a what we call a card carrying
 engineer but he
 understood a lot
 that if you hide if you take this
 vision and stick it behind the mountain
 range it sends out magnet field which is
 Marvin Minsky like to point out if you don't
 know what to do get lots of people to do lots of things
 that's what lick was doing
 and so the number one principle here of
 doing anything like this where you are going to
 get have the possibility of
 really large new things is the goodness
 of the results correlates most strongly with the goodness of
 the funders that is my
 reflection uh for from the past
 because every era has really
 smart people I've never
 been in an era that didn't have people as smart as the people I
 worked with back then but the funders
 have were wonderful in the 60s
 and uh 70s and they've been
 uh ever more terrible ever
since
 and so two of the main things that came
 out of this was human humans and
 computers working together as an idea and
 then this larger idea of augmenting human intellect
 in general so I'll just go through these quickly
million of them they're in one of the papers I handed
 out but basically go against
 conventional wisdom do Visions
 not goals let
 somebody else do the goals fun problem finding
 not just problem solving this is a key
 one because a problem
 is often too rooted in the uh context
he present
 and so if you're just doing that which is kind of what's
 going on this is what NSF likes to fund
 problems that peer reviewers can understand in the present
 and most most of them uh don't make
 big contributions
 problem finding on the other hand is difficult for
 everybody but it gives you a
 chance fun people not
 projects so in other words don't
worry you know if you've got some crazy guy who's really
 good or girl who's really good
 don't worry about what they want to do
 give them some money and see what happens
 uh corollary fund of very best people
 I don't think that's being done
 today and an important part of the research
 results are new and better researchers
 and in in a sense
 NSF is paying for some of this
 but I don't think a lot of research is being done I think
 it's mostly engineering so what I think is what
 NSF is paying for are new and better
 uh uh practical
engineers and what we need is new and better
 researchers really Advance something very important
 well that's controversial because it probably
 uh is something
 new and here's a key one design
build in the future and bring back to the
 present and one that costs a lot of
 money was make enough of the inventions
 and in a practical enough manner so that
 many people can use them in other words live
 in your own uh your own mess that
you've made then Milestones
 not deadlines
one
 okay so
 here are five things that of
 many things that people
 are in the indidual individual stars there are
 people get interested in Aesthetics
 or they prefer to Tinker they prefer to do
 engineering but the problem is The Sweet
 Spot in the center
 is something we have to get to because as Marvin says
 you don't understand
 something if you only understand it one way
 this is a key phrase for the 20
 20th and 21st centuries
 and so no matter what
 your favorite one of these is you have to get fluent
 in all of them and this is a not
he way universities are set up not the way companies
 are set up but you got to do it
 the best people I know all are in the center
 here and then there's a question about
 regarding Computing is is could there actually
 be a science of computing they
 are artificial objects after all
 we're not looking at molecules so
 forth we're looking at constructed
 things and what does that mean as a
science
 so go back into the 50s
 again we've got
 phenomena we can see these artifacts they've got
 wires and vacuum tubes and we can program them
 and we can make a high LEL language for them like Fortran
 and so forth and that isn't really
 science what is
cience well I've
 got this cryptic phrase here scientists try to find
 fireflies and make
t-shirts what does that mean
 it means that behind the stuff
 that distracts us
 there are hidden
 deeper properties the properties
 might not even be in there explicitly but they're
 there what scientists do
 is good what I call good
 woooo which is
 they let their brain relax to
point where they can start thinking beneath the surface of
 things and here's one of the first computer
 scientists John McCarthy and he
 looked at this stuff in the 50s and decided to
t-shirt of it and the
 t-shirt looks like
 this so it's kind of backwell
equations of computing and what's interesting about
 it is that it doesn't look like
 uh the hardware and it doesn't look like the software it's
 actually a mathematical
formulation of what John thought the most important
 relationships were so I would call this
maxwellian then
stronger stronger
 along the lines of Newton which is to
 explain important ideas
 here about what was lying beneath
 the surface and why it was really useful
 to think of doing things in a particular
 way and the thing
 about math is it has to be consistent meaning
 neat but it doesn't have to be
 real and so this thing that John did was
 not real but another hero
 of mine Steve Russell the guy who invented space war
 was at MIT and he looked at
 John's math and he said that's
 a program if I implement it we'll have a running system
 and John McCarthy said well he did and we did
 and that was the birth of
lisp and here's the cool thing about Computing
 the theory can also be the model and the artifact
 and you can make it
 real but there are a lot of complaints about
 dealing with pure semantics is
 too slow even after
 factor of a million or a billion
 of or more of more moris
 law still seems to be too slow
 on the other hand
 you can build a special machine for
these semantics that don't fit on regular
machines because remember
 our computer's only there to run programs so why not make
 a computer that will run the programs you want to
 run and if you try to optimize too early
 like buying a computer before
 that isn't a supercomputer before you've done your
 research you're in trouble because now you're
 forced to deal with its problems rather than your
 own so this is the kind of process
 that the arpa community went
hrough
 and this is a fun story but
 I want to bring up the fireflies again
 you can't replicate what John
McCarthy did because the
 times are different now but the fireflies
 in what he did are still there and they can still
what to do
 okay here's uh Story
 number two 62
 years ago in 1962
 this is in the
uh Sage experimental
 uh test computer called the
 tx2 it was one of the LA one one of these
 computers that was the building
 and right down at the end of one corner was this guy sitting
of a oscilloscope
screen and what was he doing
 well
here's the light pen he was
and now this display
 doesn't isn't a line drawing display it just makes a
 DOT so the there's a program
 making these lines now he tells sketchpad
 to make them all mutually perpendicular and you
 just saw it automatically
 uh clean up the drawing this is why it's called sketch pad because
 you can just draw roughly he may wants
 to make a hole in this
flange so he says here make
 these both uh uh
 parallel and perpendicular and
 now the constraint is
 make these lines I'm drawing to be collinear with the
 guidelines below so this allows
 him to quickly draw a dotted
line
 now he's going going to make the guidelines
 transparent we get a hole in the flange
and notice this is the first system to have a clipping
 window is actually drawing on a canvas
 about a third of a mile on a side being windowed
here he needs a
rivet
 so this is the rough shape of a rivet
 draws this because he wants this as
 a center for an AR AR for the top of the
 rivet and now he says okay make
 all these lines I'm pointing to here
 make these mutually perpendicular
 and that will force the drawing into
 something like a rivet maybe he doesn't
shape
 because he didn't constrain the size of the thing so here's another
solution with that those starting
 conditions but he said decides he likes the one
first now here's another cool idea Ivan
 suland did
 which was to have Masters and
 instances so
 this is not the rivet he drew
 this is an instance of the rivet he drew
 and the rotation and the scaling
 are done by knobs that he has on
console okay
 and wants to show you
 he can make more instances and that
 these instances can be different sizes and
 says whoops I forgot
 I left the crossbow on there I should make these guys transparent
 so he goes to the master drawing and makes them
 transparent and lo and behold
 all of the instances uh
 obey so he gets rid of
the thing and he says okay
 make that construction I just did into a
 master now I'm going to make instances
master
ight here's
 instances of the master
 that he made of the
conglomerate
yeah okay
 so here's a high resolution picture of Ivan
 at the console and he's doing a
 something much more complicated which is to
 draw in a bridge
 and uh unfortunately the movie
for this has been lost it's probably somewhere in Ivan's
 garage but uh for fun a couple of years ago
 we we uh did a an
 emulation of
it so here's a simple trust
 bridge and
 we can connect things up and if we turn gravity
 on which is a constraint
 you see it's Computing all the stresses and the
 strains on the bridge
 and it's continuously Computing so if we add in
 another strut
 here guess what it ripples over the
 entire bridge if we H hang a weight on
it we can stress
bridge and so the big idea here
 is it's not just about imitating
 drafting it's that we can
 simulate uh any kind
 of computer AED design drawing that we do
 or model and uh
 we get not just CAD but CAD
 Sim so this
 is a huge huge idea
 that's still done extremely poorly today
 for most
people so
 interact this is Ivan's PhD
 thesis in 1962
 inventing interactive computer Graphics
 clipping window pointing iconic IQ objects
 Masters and instances we'd call that object
first objectoriented
 programming system that I know of
 lots of nice technical things in it automatic
 Dynamic simulations from
 designs and you programmed it not in
 the standard uh programming
 languages but you programmed it in terms of
 goals in terms of the constraints that you want
and sketchpad had three problem solvers that would solve
 problems say you could see so I once
 asked Ian how could you do this in one year all by yourself
 and he said well I didn't know it was
hard check out the fireflies from this
 one
 today think about what the fireflies
 from this one are okay and also in 1962 we
 had this guy who was kind of like Moses opening
Sea
 he's really interested
 in saving the world and trying to make people
 better so they can save the world so
 his idea in 62 was to
 have a screen much he knew about sketch pad he wanted a screen
larger than that he wanted to hang the light pen
 from a a gimbal so you're
 you could just pull it down to the table and use it like a pencil
 and not have the blood run out of your hand
 when you're using it and there's this
 problem of that he thought about very
 deeply which was humans
good Learners
 from using tools we
 have this pink brain we use tools
brain kind of way
 so like a hammer we can use to hammer
 a nail into something but we can break something with a
 hammer we can do a lot of things with a hammer
 and we kind of get a hammerness into
 our brain but we get very little
 wisdom about tools and
 hammers in our brain and
 we become a hammerer
 100 thousand years later we might decide to
 use nuclear weapons on a city that's a way
 of hammering them into
submission so part of engelbert's
 idea was if you're going to augment human
 intellect for crying out loud
 you must insert Education and
 Training because what's happened is that the
 powerful agencies have gone up in power by factors
 of millions and our brains
 haven't so you want the education
 to turn parts of our brain this nice
 bluish cast and perhaps give us
 a little more wisdom on using our tools and then
a little safer using powerful methods and Powerful languages
 and so forth to do things
 so this is this five unit thing
engelbart's idea of what you really had to do if you're
 going to do this thing and you had to do it not just
 for a person but people in groups so the
groups have to be
 organized pretty much the same way
 this allows to get enormous amounts of synergy
 between the individuals they can be
 the different stars on the diagram
 I just showed you cooperating together
and four years later they
 did a first pass at this which was incredibly
impressive it's called the mother of all demos
 and uh if you type e n g l
 b a r t into
 uh Google uh in the first page of
hits you'll find a reference to the movie of that demo
 you should see what they were able to do back
little machine
 and you know when engelbart's name come up
 comes up and even in his obituaries
 the the only thing I could really talk about was the mouse
 and this really bug
 Doug said the mouse the mouse is just
 a dial on a car radio we invented a whole
car they won't look at it
 you can get an idea of this there are about 70
 papers on the website devoted to him
 talking about these deep ideas as I
 me mentioned previously only about 30%
 of what engelbart was talking about
 got taken up uh in
 Computing today so this is a big huge area
 that's got fir Plies everywhere and these are just
 three of the 17 or
 18 uh principal invest
 investigators that arpa put together
 so these are the kind of people and
 if we talk about cooperation and methods we've
 got to talk about the blind
 philosophers trying to figure out an elephant
 this is a classic thing and
 they all have this flaw that I
in the beginning that they think what's between their
 ears is uh not belief
 but reality so of course this leads to
war
 and after thousands of years the idea of compromise
 comes about but this does not
 need to a pretty picture of an elephant or a
 way to make an elephant and in
 fact this is my picture of the way Computing is
 today practical Computing is just a
 horrendous compromise
 almost none of it was
necessary
 now if you get scientific
 philosophers they've learned how to
 cooperate in science works by looking at
parts of things and looking
 at what other people have looked at other
 people looked at other parts of things
 and eventually coming to conclusions about the
 whole so that's a really good
 idea but in fact science
 because our brains want to believe rather than think
 these can turn into something like a
 religion and the reason uh we don't
 want to come up with blind belief
there's always
more there's always more and what
 it is is something that we can't
imagine so when we give a a name
 to something we're hurting our
 belief in because we
 defined it it's a category now
 we've hurt our ability
 to think more about it because it already has a
 set of properties it already is the thing that the
denotes and here's
 a an ad I suggested to Apple
 many years ago uh for the
 kind of people they wanted to have at Apple what kind should they be and
 I suggest well do make a picture of something
 like this uh the right
do with
 good P implies q and
 the left hand the right brain has to be able to do good woow
oo
 and what is good wool because
 uh the thing the thing to understand here let me just
second here I think to
 understand here is it was really hard to
 invent good Plies Q
 was only invented a few thousand years ago but once we did
 it it turned out to be fairly easy for us to
 do and humans
 are more or less born babies are born with good
 woooo uh and woooo
 in general and the problem
 is that most woooo is actually uh quite
 dangerous for the human mind so
to find good woowoo
 so here's one
definition art is
 a lie that tells the
truth
and learn
 the rules like a pro that's the stuff you can do on the right
 hand side of the board so you can break them like artist
 like an artist on the leftand side of the
 board you got to do both or else
just bullshitting around
and this is hard to do in school because as Marvin
 said school is the best thing ever invented to keep you from thinking
about something important for more than a few
 minutes you have to ask that about where you are
 right now even though I'm a professor
 there and Len is a
 professor uh schools have their own way about
 them like the fact
 this talk actually has a
 uh designed end back at
 MIT they would just get Marvin talking and
out of steam in about six hours or so and everybody
happy
 here's another genius huge
 influence on me he said institutional
 education seeks to make the strange familiar
 well that that sounds kind of reasonable
 yeah that's what we're you're paying them for
 things you don't understand you want to Now understand it but
 Jerry says the job of real education
 is to make the familiar strange again
 it's the stuff that we've that has
 come embedded into our belief system about
 normal that is keeping us
 being pedestrian
thinking would you do if normal could seem strange
normal you would have been able to
 escape your present if you escape your present
 don't forget to use a
Lifeline how do we measure
 things well usually with graphs that
 go from the left in the
 past towards the future going towards
 the right and if something goes up
 we say a and if it goes down we say boo and so on and
 so forth and if you think about this
 graphs like this are complete
  and the reason is in order
understand whether we should say yay or not
 we have to have a threshold and the threshold
here like these could be uh reading
scores for children and uh
 the children are never learning to read here
 they're getting better or worse
 at what they're not being able to do
 and so the key to make
is to understand that both better and perfect are the
 enemies of what is actually needed better is the tough one
in engineering school because you get rewards for doing something
 better but what we're looking for here is
 something new and to get something new we
 have to come up with the low the minimal
 idea that is just above the
 threshold it's just into the
blue
 and we've once we've stepped into the blue we're actually in
 a different way of thinking about things
 so this is you know like going from
 uh not having mathematics to mathematics
 or not going from not having writing to having
 writing or going from not having science
 to having science these are big
 things so you want to look for that star
and the learning curve you might have to start off
 below where other people
 think you should be but the main thing is to
up there okay so
 here's another example world's greatest
 hockey player made many many more goals
 than anybody and he was not a big
uy
 uh had a couple of nice sayings he missed
 100% of the shots you don't take people do
 that all the time you don't try enough
 and here's this big one a good hockey player goes to where the
 puck is a great one goes to where
 the puck will be and he didn't mean calculating
 the trajectory of the puck he meant getting to a place
 where one of his teammates could pass
do a quick shot on goal
 that was the Wayne gy game and we can play it in
 technology so here's an example from my
 own career I had a woowoo intuition
 about children having their own
 portable tablet computers in
 1968 which was impossible
 back then but the second
 stage is can you find a favorable exponential
Mo's law
 and this allows you to take this
 intuition out 30 years
 and out 30 years in the future
could say you can ask
 would it be ridiculous if we didn't have this and
 30 years that's 1995 the answer is
 yeah it' be ridiculous if we didn't have tablet computers
 by 1995
okay so you bring it bring the idea back to
 the mid 80s can we do
 something by the mid 80s
 yes but
 software takes a long long time
 and we're in 1972 now so
 what we need to do is to make a bunch of
 flexible supercomputer time machines
 personal make a lot of them
 so the researchers can live and work in the future
 that is what we did at Park that dollar
 sign says More's law
 means that for most
 points in the future you can have
 them now if you're willing to spend a lot more
 money the commodity thing in the
 future is the supercomputer of the present
build the right kind of supercomputer in the present
 and you now have years to work on these really hard
 software ideas and that is where the star
 was at Park
 uh the dotted line there says you better
do this really quickly or else you're going to get
 submerged into tool building
 you're going to be doing uh just computers and operating
 systems and you're not going to be doing what you're originally
 trying to do so you have to be have to be
 have a lot of chops to
 do this and in fact the alto was done in a period of
 about three and a half months by an AB absolute genius
 uh Chuck
ther and once You' got this
 you can start inventing the software of the future and
 the supercomputer nature of it means
 something like user interface
 you can you don't
 have to optimize you can just
 uh do 10 experiments a
 day for a week throw away your code
 don't even bother stay because uh you could put a higher level
 language on it you can do experiments you don't have to
 optimize you need to find out what the
 how the users respond to things and then
right hand side uh if you're
 willing to optimize you can do software like is going to
 exis in quantity in the 80s
 that happens to be uh
 the first version of Microsoft Word which was done at
 ZX park it made uh Microsoft
 many many billions of dollars when it was
 released uh 15 years
 later right
 okay okay we're coming down to the end here
 so 1963 lick wrote a
 memo members and Affiliates
 of The Intergalactic computer
network they asked them why Intergalactic
 he said well Engineers always give you less than you're asking
 for so I want a worldwide Network so I'm going to ask
 for an Intergalactic one and
 when they when they quit bitching and moaning and scale it down it's still going
 to be worldwide had
 this great line here if we succeed
an Intergalactic Network then our main problem
 will be learning to communicate with
 aliens we'll look at that for in a
minute and
 to this psychologist he said at this extreme
 the problem is essentially the one discussed by science
fiction writers how do you get
 communication started among totally
 uncorrelated Sapient beings and he thought
 here of that scaling
 more or less destroys communication
 even amongst humans and scaling
 and technology is going to destroy Communications
 and so forth so
 this is the this is what we need to think
 about and he and Bob Taylor wrote a
 paper of which I've expanded on a little
 bit so the idea is
 uh here's a human
 who's trying to say I'm come in
 peace and the alien is saying uh
 maybe I should kill this
guy between two humans
 uh a description of something with a man and ho
 Hooves and a tail could be a horse for one
 guy and a zebra for
another here's our multiple
 BL brains I talked about one part of my
 brain wants chocolate the other one realizes I should have an
 apple then we've got this new thing
 the computer
 what is what's on its mind not much
 and uh it doesn't understand what a horse is that's
ure so when we're talking
else we might not be able to get together on what a
 horse or a zebra is but we have a better
hamburger worldwide so
 shared context is what we're looking
 for and if we find a way and
 what we do with language is to try and point
what we think is the shared context between us
person so if we look back at the theater here
 what is it what is
 shared what the theater is for is to reflect
 the intelligence of the audience back to them you're not
 trying to teach them I'm not trying to teach
 you right now I'm trying to give you something
 that you can reflect your intelligence back
 on so the theater has to do
 most of the negotiations for the audience that's too
 bad but writing and reading are the same
 thing same idea
 and there's a huge difference between a good writer
 and a bad writer for these
reasons so let's think of communication
 as an extension of the gesture
 so what could two different computers have in common
 well could be something like the dynamic messaging
 of real objectoriented
 programming could be something like what Linda
 did but with David gar her we
still have the problem of real aliens but let's look
 at the problem with the
 person people and computer what
 could they have in common
and
 so
 what can we make that is going to beam the
audience's intelligence and knowledge back out
 them what should we put on the
stage
 and so the guoy is a representation of
 what the computer is thinking about
 in a form that humans can uh
 understand the human can
 actually gesture at the
topic that he wants to talk
 about each window holds a
 context and is a topic for conversation all the possible
 conversation are active no modes
 undoing is critical everywhere gesturing and
 dragging and J Eng gauges the body
 brain pictures are more memorable than
 words so use those doing with images make
 symbols and this is kind of Jerome Bruner
 101 this one is particularly
important okay so
 this is kind of
a summary
 of the way
 people were thinking back then
 and if you think about the park
 guey of all the things that
 this research community did back then
 the thing that made the trillion ion dollar
 Industries was not just Mo's
 law because
 there was nobody to sell Mo's law or
 even any reason to do Mo's law
 at the scale it which was done unless
 millions and billions of people could actually use this stuff and
reason millions and billions of people can use the stuff
 is because of the invention of the
guy
 okay so
 I don't even know what time it is
 but um I'm up to the
 dot dot dot question about what my greatest
 aha Etc was and but I'm gonna pause
 here and just check in with
Lenny
hello um
 how long how long was that by the way uh we
 are uh we uh we still have time so
 if you have uh
 okay so um
 the so now now the choice
 uh uh can get
 a another question from the audience we can
 do this dot dot dot thing whatever you'd
 like um we have one
question so Len
 was this uh was this recognizable to you
 oh my god totally I mean there anecdotes all
 over the presentation that would add to it
 but you nailed it beautifully you captured that
 there and the characters
 and the uh mix between
 highly Cooperative groups and
 individual working on their own
things happen there's a lot of individual
 yet the group action came in
and out in and out it was an interest it wasn't
 pure you know one versus many
 it was so
 I think I forgot to mention was uh that
 I don't think uh lick intended it or maybe
 he did but uh what turned out to be the
 messenger uh mechanism
 and there happened to be graduate students and interns
 including you for example
 I mean I flew 140,000 miles as a
 grad student Dave Evans had a huge budget
 for airplane travel for his grad
students well Steve managed
 to basically bankrupt mine
 doing the same thing yeah because you gota
 these and and ARP I should have mentioned
 that arpa in uh
 1968 funded the first arpa
 graduate student conference which was modeled
 on the arpa contractors meetings
 that's another story about how that happened but
 uh that was really great because uh things went
 in the amount of intercommunication
 and Trust because a lot
about trust and
 yet it was not um what shall I
say a
 a bowl of soup it was contentious
 in a positive way I'll give you one example
we had this principal investigators meeting John McCarthy
 arrived about 20 minutes late someone was presenting
minutes later McCarthy raised his hand and says excuse
 me I have no idea what you're talking about
 he says but I was late
 however if I came in in time I still think I with no idea
 what you're talking about B can imagine your interaction
was wonderful yeah I should have
that the one of the main things I learned in grad school
 and everybody at Park knew was
 uh that the purpose of arguing is not to win
 but to to illuminate
 and uh in fact when people started getting
 he in an argument Taylor would
 say type two type two
 and a type two argument was all
sudden you had to explain the other person's position
 back to them until they agreed with
 it and then they had to explain your
position back to you until you agreed with it and by
happened you'd forgotten what you're arguing about and
 you okay let's go to the question
 all right we have a question here yeah hello
 um and I I agree and I guess I kind of apologize
 for the uh structure
 that we have because it does impose any limitations on the
 discussion um I'm on on the faculty
 too so uh but
 you know faculty meetings uh there's too
much contention because the stakes are too
low I
 quit going um so I have two questions which are
 a little related um so so number
 one was
 do you think and and maybe you'll agree that
 there's kind of been a split between the
 practicers of technology which are the software engineers
 and the systems thinkers who are like the theoreticians
 and the inventors um if so why
 any suggestions to remediate this uh
also asking to Professor kleinrock if he has any
 input on that and my second question is probably a little
 related um which is what are your
 thoughts on I guess all of this
 development most like a lot of it has been going into private
research Labs like Google X and Microsoft
 research um do do you think it's still kind of
 analogous to Bell labs in back in the
 day uh no
 B for instance at Bell Labs
 if you walked around back before
 the divesture uh you
that would say
 either do something very useful or very
beautiful
 I've never seen a sign like that at
research okay so
 because that's a pro that's a huge
 problem I
 guess go ahead yeah go ahead oh no I guess I have a follow-up
question to that which is uh you mentioned a bit earlier in the talk
 one of the questions I sent over which is uh do you think
 younger people have a harder problem these days in you know living
 in this more materialistic world world so
 to speak yeah you know
 just just one example I I was
 at Park in Palo Alto and
 um
 the general inflation has been about
 a factor of seven since then
 or so and when I
 factor that into the salary I got at Park it's about what
I would get just you
 know I was just a year out of grad school when I went to park
 so uh really uh not a
 huge wasn't a lot of money but
with today
 however I was able to buy a house in
 paloalto uh right near
 Park and it only cost twice my yearly
 salary
okay that house has inflated
 by a factor of 70 not seven
 so then do you go go ahead
 go ahead so the uh
 so if Park existed today
 so if Park existed today
 uh none of us
 and and Taylor wanted to hire he only hired older
 people uh from the arpa community
 as advisers
 he didn't want I was the oldest person there and I
 was 30 he didn't
 he wanted a new know he wanted the researchers that ARA
 had Jed out there and he used
 the uh the generation before us as as advisers
 and so if
 if I if they had tried to set this
 up uh somebody would have had to
 buy a lot of housing in Palo Alo
 and you know when when Google is being
 set up and when HP was being set up I said hey look
 at Stanford Stanford figured this out a long time ago
 because if you get an associate professorship at
 Stanford one of the perks is a 99-year
 lease at a very low interest rate
 on Stanford land for a house
 and Stanford was owns a lot
houses in Palo Alta they bought them up before the Big
 Deck companies got there because they
 understood that people have a life might
 not be much of a life outside the lab but they still got
 one by the way
 Lan will love the the story that
 metf and bogs had the record
longest period uh
 inside of Park without leaving it
 which uh during the critical period of the
 the ethernet which was two and a half
months they had a
 cafeteria you know it had plenty of places you could sleep
 it had showers
um wasn't wasn't that helpful on
 if you had a marriage that didn't
 get this idea uh
 they would suffer but yeah so to so
 the the a big problem today and and you know
 I run run various
 kinds of I've been able to fund until
 about I don't know five six years ago I was able to fund
 a nonprofit research thing that
 was about to size of the group I had at Park
 and uh and to get people who are
 as good as the people I had at Park
 but it wasn't the same as Park similarly
 Butler Lamson and Chuck ther went with deck
 initially and then with
 Microsoft and it wasn't the same as park
 because they
 uh you know for example
 my habit when when I would get confused
 about something was to go down and have
 Butler tear it to shreds
 and I miss missmiss
 being able to just walk down the hall into
 that crystallin Palace of his
 mind and you could
 never top Butler on the same
least I couldn't but Butler
 was an was honest if you came back three days
 later and said now here is the real point
 you would say you're
 right so that's a really great C it's a
 genius there's no question he's one of the most brilliant
 people I've ever met and an honest
 genius and a guy who by the way
 helped my group whenever he could
 despite the fact that our theory of programming language
 design was quite different from
 his he didn't give a about
 that so he was Butler was a big man
 in my opinion just a big fantastic
 so it's that Synergy
 it's what happens in the
 halls and it's
 what happens when you're having like
 EP uh
 you know how how many beer beer Laden lunches
 do you have how many bike rides up to the top
 of the uh the hills around
 Palo Alto with all these people no
 there's a whole whole thing there that is going to
 pay off by
 what the group is willing to do and reason I kept on
 showing theater is
 arpa at its best park at its best was like
 theater at its best you've got the most diverse
 group of people you ever saw
 some of which some of whom can't even
 stand each other
 but the whole point of the thing is
audience that's going to be there
 six weeks from now or six months
 from now and
 so you get this thing where people
 work 24 hours a day and they just find
 ways to solve everything they
 do the woo woo on the leftand side that's
 what theater is about and they
 do all of the stuff you have to do in the physical
 world to make it work and
 know if you don't have those and
 if they don't like Len did
 this if those people don't have some of
 the other in them to have this shared context
 there has to be a place where you go and it's
 the love of what you're gonna
 get the audience to try to think about
 because you can't tell the audience
 anything can't people only remember
you make them feel
 so so you have to lay it this is why I
all these pictures and stuff because I want the pictures
 to do things you can't do in regular
 words and
 yeah so the question is
 uh the way I look
 at playing the blame game
 here is businesses
 are in a terrible position
 fidu in a fiduciary responsibility way
 for doing the kind of stuff that arpa
 and park did they have every
 and especially the Milton Freedman American businesses
 which are a terrible way to do business in
 general there you know Peter Dreer used to say
 that that business's main obligation
 is to their uh customers
 and Milton fredman said no business's
 main obligation is to their stockholders
 and that has turned really ugly that
 is really ugly so but in any case
 good or bad they're in a bad place for it
 uh research can only be
xpensed eeks
 you could be sitting on a ton of cash tough
  comes out of the bottom
 line so so when I when
 I look there I Look to society and
 government part of the idea
 of getting people to pay
 taxes is to deal with things
 in a way that is hard for
 scattered groups to deal with with or without
 engelbart stuff and I think the
 the woo woo research stuff done
 right is one of those things and I just happened
 to stumble into it I didn't go to
 Utah knowing anything about arpa I'd never heard of arpa
 I just stumbled in there by by and
 chance and I found out I was in Paradise
because
 and the dod was doing fine because
 uh arpa ipto cost almost nothing compared to
 the the whole DOD
 budget it was just fingernail clipping so it's the perfect
 place for doing this
 uh enlightened public
 domain uh research and you had the ultimate
 enlightened public domain mind in lick
 to do that the key thing
Park was that Taylor loved
 lick he he was a psychologist
 also he truly loved
 lick and I'll I'll
 finish in one second Jason and he
uh
 he studied lick so lick
 was intu
 intuition he had great inter but Taylor
 codified lick those rules
put up there were not Lick's rules but Taylor's
 rules and anytime you wanted to park you could
 go and lie on the floor in Taylor's office we we were floor culture
 we had thick carpets that were
padding underneath so you could just roll around on the floor we had bean
 bags and inste of chairs so you go
there and lie in there for an hour and let Taylor tell
 you what he was why he was doing what he was doing at
 Park and it was mostly these rules
I wrote down you got to do this you got to do that
 uh etc etc like
 okay so um
 yeah so I point I point my finger
 at the government and if you point your finger at the government you
have to point your finger at the
 uh uh the American
 Body politic and if you point your finger at them you have
 to point your finger at education
 public education if you point your finger at publication
 public education you point your finger at the government
 again so the government has not
 done its job and by the way over here in London in
the UK it's it's worse
 uh the politicians are a little nicer over here
 but they're equally uh incompetent
 they just don't do not understand and
 their financial base is much smaller over here
 so they're in more desperate need
 of the kind of Industries they can afford
 that actually work in the 21st century
need this um
 yeah so uh but when
after the government
 should be doing this that and the other thing
 I I can't get far from the educ
from the University because the university used to be the co
the flame the whole
 point there was
 the universities were not beholden to
 business their job was not to do job
 training in obsolete software
 systems to deal with business's
 problems with Legacy systems that is not the job
university that's a trade school and there's nothing
 I love trade schools the high school I
 went to was a was a one you had to take
 a test to get into but it was a glorified trade school Lenny
 will tell you and uh I learned a lot
 there but Jesus the
 universities have got to uphold
 something like the way the 21st century
 should be for the students or the students
 are just going to go there and buy degrees in order
 to get jobs that is my general
 picture so the university
 could put us you know I when I was active
 around UCLA at some faculty
 meeting uh
 maybe more than one
 I brought up the idea hey wait a minute UCLA is one of the
 top 10 schools and uh
 there are other top 10 schools in the nation
in the University of California
 you know basically you
 know why are we letting the
 Regents determine that tenure
 uh re requires paper
counting
 UCLA should be able to say well you know Screw You
 Regents screw you and
 Davis and uh San Diego
 and Santa Barbara screw you Regents
 we're not going to do it that way
 we're not gonna count papers for Christ's
 sake you know
 if you got to count a paper you at least have to put a weight on it
 and it's hard to put a weight on a paper until 10 years
 have passed you
 just can't do it that way or you're going to turn it into
 a Job Shop and
 uh you know uh I pointed out
 to the UCLA faculty that because of
 you know the the discussion was wow
 our department is really popular now we've got more
 students than we can handle I said well godamn it
 if you got that that's what the bean counters
 in the University care
 about is retention because it's money
 you've got them just say
 okay all right
 we're going to do tenure differently we're going to hire
differently we're going to have a different set of Standards
 here
 or we're just goingon to uh you know etc
 etc but the 60s were
 long over by the time I made that
stand
okay next question
 I have a question yes
this
 was sorry
 this was a and I've heard you many
 times and always I I recognize
 this accent always
 yes I'm ready I'm ready
 I'm ready always very entertaining
 and uh thoughtful
 but I I feel there is now
a huge crra a
 Gap uh which we didn't you didn't
would be nice if you could have a thought or address
 which is everything in the past
 seems to me have to do let's
 call it with mathematics has
 Precision prob language is not
we talk it has precision
 and suddenly I think the new
 Queen the new the new thing in the helm
the new Revolution is is
 without Precision it's without
 and we built machine that we do not
 understand how they work but
 they work they perform they
 perform not in Precision
 you know if there will be a a self-driving
 car it will kill somebody there is no question you
 cannot guarantee that this will not happen
it's a new thing and
 I feel most of us here on this list
 on the nine people that are left
 we are dinosaurs of the past
 and what do you have any thoughts about
 this well uh
 just by chance in the late 60s
 I was visiting MIT and there was a meeting
 of DOD people with
 uh the AI people at MIT
 and I think mensky was saying
 you know in a few years we might be able to do what a dog can
 do and uh the fourstar
 general said a dog
 he said look we don't even want what ordinary humans can
 do we can draft them we've got two million
 robots in the in the Department of Defense already
 we train them and they learn well and
they carry guns and they do all the stuff that we want
 we already got intelligent robots we need
 superhuman intelligence that's what
 we need and
so I
 I don't want to start a long discussion about
 you know but it happens that the
 what J Judea Pearl calls curve
fitting machine learning
 uh as you know
 also very well goes all the way back
 20 30 40 years
 or 50 years or more Minsky's
thesis was actually one of the first perceptrons
 so the idea of
 of finding complex
 transfer functions between lots of inputs and
 fewer outputs is has been around for a while
 and uh it's definitely a a
 big component of what's going on inside of our
 brains but
 the I I think
 the we should ask
 more for example uh
 I wouldn't want to use an
 AI that
 couldn't be vetted in
 some way and of
 course uh the chat Bots
 uh can lie whenever it suits them
 and by the way I just saw that uh
 uh open AI chatbot
 has recently gone nuts
 which is really fun track this down
it started something went wrong and it's now it's mostly
 hallucinating so these are
 like human beings these are creators
 that's what we are that's what we
 got inside there and I believe that
 we're we're better than we
 were 100,000 years ago mainly
 because we invented
 methods for thinking
 the big one being science
 math allows you to in a consistent
 way but it
 it doesn't have any necessary connection to
 reality where science wants to be able
 to do uh
 crisp thinking in a way that is anchored to
 reality such that the uh the
cues might have something to do with reality also
 I think that is a very very good thing I think it would help
 our politics on both sides of the lanic
 tremendously if uh schools started
 teaching CH basically doing what engelbart
 said we have to insert better methods
 than the ones we were born with or
 simple uh large language models
 have uh in order to
 uh be able to use them in
 any reasonable way that's my my
answer
 got it got it and then we also have one more
 question from the audience um I wanted to get a chance to
 yeah have him ask hi professor Kate thank you
 for your talk today um I'm born in the 21st century
 so my uh I guess
 thoughts about zorx Park is the only one I know of
Steve Jobs's visit where he commercializes
 the guey that you guys invented into the apple one
 so I was
 yeah so what he saw was what
 what he saw was what we did
 he visited it was a visit to my
 group uh and I was in the
 room uh during that visit
 and the demo we gave him and
 uh we became friends uh partly
 as the result of that visit so
 ask me any question you want to ask about that
 visit uh yeah I mean my first question was going
if you happen to be in the room at all but now I know
 uh second of all would be Steve had or
 Mr jobs uh had a way of combining design
 and pushing the boundaries of engineering through that I
 was wondering how Zero's or
 the Park's attitude towards pushing research
 um the boundaries of research were or what
 influence so
 the so let me answer it's a two-part
 question so one part uh is
 early in the 80s I said to both Steve
 and Bill Gates uh
 this is during the controversy of whether apple and
 Microsoft had stolen the ideas from
 Xerox and
 you know I told I said to both of them I said
 look we want this we want you to steal the
 ideas but for Christ's sake steal
whole idea don't steal a protest
 caricature yeah the whole
 yeah that's why I say the the disappointing figures
that I put there was the amount of actual
 takeup uh so the second thing is that
what Steve was
 uh he was NE say the two words you said again designer
 and a pusher of
 engineering yeah right okay so
 Steve was not a designer
 and he was a pusher of
 people so the key thing about Steve
 was that he had a lot of good
 woowoo
 so where he picked up
 he could feel the fireflies if he'd been a scientist
 it would have been much better for
 everybody because as he said and there's a famous
 interview you can find on YouTube where
 Steve says he says when I first went to Xerox
 I was so blinded by the user interface I couldn't see anything
 else I couldn't see object-oriented programming I
see the networks he had to
 wait until he did next years later when he ran into
another contingent from the old Arbor Community
 to explain to them why you why you need
 those but we he didn't
 understand how the stuff and we couldn't tell
 him uh we were
 able to show him uh like one of the famous
 things that happened in the demo
 my my one of my favorite demo things and if I had had time
because we recreated that system just for the shits
 of it so it actually runs the system that we showed
 him and um I occasionally will'll do
 it live in a talk um
 but Steve had two complaints while he was and
 he was really watching he
 had his acolytes around him
 uh but Steve Steve was really paying
 attention to the thing and he
said you know
 I don't like You' never seen a scroll bar before but he
 didn't like the fact that as you pulled it it
went line by line he
 says can't that go be done
 continuously and Dan Engles who was giving the demo
 because small talk is live
 I mean live down to the operating systems so
 Dan was able to do a couple of Clips
 here's where the slow scroll bar thing is
 uh change a line of code
 quar a second later things are scrolling
 smoothly and later on
 uh when we were showing text
 selection um we liked
 we tried a lot of different ways of doing it but we' like the
 complimenting the characters
 which is what basically is done
 today uh and Steve didn't like that he said
 can't you do an outline
 around the you know he's right because it's comp
and white complimenting
 is a little bit too in your face
 face so he's right there
 and so my jaw was on the
 floor because Dan Engles went in there
 that was not a trivial thing you know because if
 you think of the selection
 you have to find the actual boundary of the selection and
 you have to uh
 treat it the right way and Dan went right to the
 thing and basically what he did was to
 just take the code that comp mented
 copy it and shift the
 coordinates of the comp of the second
 complementation uh diagonally
 by two
 so you get to so what it would do in it before you could see it would do
compliment then it would shift diagonally do another compliment
 and that would leave a a black line around the selection
 just what Steve asked for it's like one of
 the greatest things I've ever seen done unprepared
 in a demo in a program progamming system in my
 life that was uh
 1979 yeah so that was uh
good and
 uh uh Apple didn't steal
 you know Apple did do a great thing
 as the ba from the basis of that
 stuff uh which was the Lisa
done before the mac
 and the Lisa was done
 uh with Park people who are
 hired
 uh uh and with
 some very smart people who are at Apple like Bill
 ainson and the Lisa was
 really nice it was the best thing you
 could possibly do for that day was
 done on a 68,000
 microprocessor which meant an enormous amount
 of programming for to do the graphics that were so easy
 on the alto but they did it and it was really
 great and uh a system
 you would die for you could get
 for 10,000
 bucks and $10,000 happen to
 be the average price of a car new car in the United
 States at that time um sorry to interrupt
 we're almost at the top of the second hour uh
 of the of the talk so almost at the end of the second hour of
the talk um so I just want to get a quick chance for people who have
 class um but first please Round of Applause for our
 speaker for the people who are
left yeah
 so I
 love I I just expected
 uh that you would have you would give me
 one of your uh Barbed
comments I love
those
 okay thank you thank you than you one and all
 thank you for thank you thank
 you Alan thank you so much yeah but don't
 don't use your car while you're driving Glen
 well I had to meet Stella she's waiting for me
 and for an hour and now so sorry I had to step
 out that's good you listen to
Marvin
 of course happy wife happy
 life uh the number one
 that's rule zero
 not that's not even rule one that's rule
 zero you got it you got it
 thank you very much again Alan thank you thanks
 so much Allan
 thank you bye bye