Announcing 40th Anniversary Event at Stanford Dec 9, 2008 - click for details

December 9th, 2008 • 1:00-5:30pm
at Stanford University • click for details
Photo of Doug giving his 1968 demo
Also check out the Program for the Future Conference
Dec 8-9 leading up to SRI's big event at Stanford.

Welcome   0

The Doug Engelbart Institute* was conceived by Doug Engelbart to further his lifelong career goal of boosting our ability to better address complex, urgent problems. As he sees it, both the rate and the scale of change are increasing very rapidly worldwide, and we as a people must get that much faster and smarter at anticipating, assessing, and responding to important challenges collectively if we are to stay ahead of the curve, and thrive as a planet. In other words, we must get faster and smarter at boosting our Collective IQ.1

It is along this chosen career path that Engelbart became prominent as a pioneer of the digital age. He garnered fame especially through his invention of the computer mouse, and is credited with many pioneering firsts including interactive computing, hypermedia, groupware, and online community support, much of which was first showcased in his now-famous 1968 Demo. More on this will be found in our History pages, a part of this website dedicated to conserving and chronicling the past. 2

However, the overarching aim of this website is to inform decision-makers and a wider public about a strategy and tools for achieving peak performance within commercial enterprises as well as the public sector, and especially within initiatives aimed at making the world a better place. Indeed, Doug Engelbart has applied the same ingenuity that spawned his technological innovations to the challenge of how teams and whole organizations can boost their Collective IQ, and use that heightened capacity for increasing effectiveness and innovation. More on this strategy, as well as the enabling tools and techniques for strategic pursuit, can be found in the About Us and Projects pages of this website.
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In our online Library and Press pages you can browse all the articles, documents, audio, and video materials documenting all aspects of Engelbart's work to date. Selected works are also available at our online Store. And if you are so moved, please also visit our Giving page to show your appreciation and support.4

We also now have a special section of the website devoted to KIDS! Whether you are here to work on a homework assignment, or just for fun, check it out!5




The National Medal of Technology, the highest award in its class in the United States.

On December 1, 2000, the White House bestowed the medal on Douglas Engelbart, essentially for his technological achievements including the invention of the computer mouse.7

See Honors for more on this and other prestigious awards.8