Representing Computer-Aided Design: Screenshots and the Interactive Computer circa 1960

Perspectives on Science 24 (6):637-668 (2016)
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Abstract

Sometimes in the course of image-making, images are asked to represent unusual things. Around 1960, scientists and engineers working on the Computer-Aided Design Project at MIT began imagining that computers could be “active partners” to human designers. They began talking about a future of “human-computer symbiosis.” And they created a new type of image—the screenshot—that represented this new possibility. This paper describes early CAD research as a site for the emergence of the ideal of the interactive computer and how this ideal was described and distributed through screenshots.Though we now routinely associate computers with interactivity, interactivity was beyond the average user’s experience in 1960....

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Citations of this work

Reconsidering cameraless photography.Tomáš Dvořák - 2022 - Philosophy of Photography 13 (1):3-15.

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References found in this work

Image and Logic: A Material Culture of Microphysics.Peter Galison (ed.) - 1997 - University of Chicago Press: Chicago.
Genesis of the media concept.John Guillory - 2010 - Critical Inquiry 36 (2):321-362.
The Factual Sensibility.Lorraine Daston - 1988 - Isis 79:452-467.

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