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HISTORY OF
INTERACTION DESIGN
Week 2: Interaction Design Before Computers
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http://www.uvm.edu/landscape/dating/automobiles/1900s_automobiles_files/image003.jpg   http://gunbyphotoarchive.com/biplane.jpg                            4
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2449/3797319200_a615b3f7de.jpg                          http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/fd/Mule-jenny.jpg
http://koti.mbnet.fi/~oju/retro/KayproIIopened.jpg                 http://cdn-viper.demandvideo.com/media/                5
http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B00083YK3M.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg   http://www.useit.com/alertbox/20040607_6_remotes.jpg
FIT THE PERSON TO THE MACHINE




FIT THE MACHINE TO THE PERSON

                                6
EARLY INFORMATION
PROCESSING
An undetected error in a logarithmic table is
like a sunken rock at sea yet undiscovered,
upon which it is impossible to say what
wrecks may have taken place.
                  —Sir John Herschel (1842)




                                       First published table of Logarithms by John Napier, 1614
                                       http://www.math.yorku.ca/SCS/Gallery/images/dan/napier_logtable.jpg   8
TABLES




         Cambridge Elementary Mathematical Tables
         http://blogofsorts.files.wordpress.com/2008/09/scan0004-1.jpg   9
CHARLES BABBAGE


                                                       “
(1791–1871)

                                                           As soon as an Analytical Engine
                                                           exists, it will necessarily guide the
                                                           future course of the science.
                                                           Whenever any result is sought by
                                                           its aid, the question will then arise
                                                           — by what course of calculation
                                                           can these results be arrived at by
                                                           the machine in the shortest time?
                                                                  —Passages from the Life of a
                                                                      Philosopher, ch. 8 “Of the
                                                                              Analytical Engine”


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:CharlesBabbage.jpg                                          10
JACQUARD LOOM
(1801)




           http://researchlospixeleros.files.wordpress.com/2008/09/jacquard-loom51.jpg
                                                                                         11
THE DIFFERENCE ENGINE
(1822)




http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/4/45/Difference_engine.JPG
                                                                      12
A   B     C    D    E
Calculating   1   1
the cube of             7
a number      2    8         12
                        19        6
by the        3   27         18
method of               37        6
differences   4   64         24
                        61        6
              5   125        30
                        91        6
              6   216        36
                                  6
              7                       13
THE ANALYTICAL ENGINE
(1833)




                  web.arch.usyd.edu.au/~sriz8189/computing7.html   14
“
ADA LOVELACE
(1815–1852)

                                                The Analytical Engine weaves algebraic patterns,
                                                just as the Jacquard loom weaves flowers and
                                                leaves.
                                                Many persons who are not conversant with
                                                mathematical studies imagine that because the
                                                business of [the Engine] is to give its results in
                                                numerical notation, the nature of its processes
                                                must consequently be arithmetical and numerical,
                                                rather than algebraical and analytical. This is an
                                                error. The engine can arrange and combine its
                                                numerical quantities exactly as if they were
                                                letters or any other general symbols; and in fact
                                                it might bring out its results in algebraical
                                                notation, were provisions made accordingly.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/87/Ada_Lovelace.jpg                             15
(1880)
                                                                              THE CENSUS




16




http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/b/b0/1880_census_Hollerith.gif
HERMAN HOLLERITH
(1860 – 1929)




http://www.census.gov/history/img/Hollerith.jpg   http://www.columbia.edu/acis/history/1890-card.gif   17
HOLLERITH CENSUS TABULATOR
(1890)




http://www.columbia.edu/acis/history/census-tabulator.html   18
http://www.columbia.edu/acis/history/census-
tabulator.html                                 19
http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/vintage/images/4506VV2015.jpg   20
http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/vintage/vintage_4506VV9002.html
                                                                             21
THOMAS J. WATSON


                “
(1874 – 1956)

                    Good design is good business.
                    Design must reflect the practical and
                    aesthetic in business but above all...
                    good design must primarily serve
                    people.




                                                         22
1925   1933




              http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/
1949   1964
                                            23
“   One place where IBM did succeed was in keeping
    viable the basic input medium of the punched
    card, and with that the basic flow of data through
    a customer’s installation. The same card, encoded
    the same way and using a keypunch little changed
    since the 1930s, served IBMs computers through
    the 1960s and beyond. The sequential processing
    and file structure, implicit in punched card
    operations, also survived in the form of batch
    processing common to most mainframe computer
    centers of the 1960s.
            —Ceruzzi, A History of Modern Computing
                                                     24
THE HUMAN FACTOR
F.W. TAYLOR


                                                “
 (1856 – 1915)

                                                                   Now one of the very first requirements
                                                                   for a man who is fit to handle pig iron as a
                                                                   regular occupation is that he shall be so
                                                                   stupid and so phlegmatic that he more
                                                                   nearly resembles in his mental make-up
                                                                   the ox than any other type. The man who
                                                                   is mentally alert and intelligent is for this
                                                                   very reason entirely unsuited to what
                                                                   would, for him, be the grinding monotony
                                                                   of work of this character.




http://explorepahistory.com/images/ExplorePAHistory-a0j8p9-a_349.jpg
                                                                                                             26
SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT




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“   Because this was total war, involving great masses
    of men and women, it was no longer possible to
    adopt the Tayloristic principle of selecting a few
    specialized individuals to match a pre-existing job.
    The physical characteristics of the equipment now
    had to be designed to take advantage of human
    capabilities and avoid the negative effects of
    human limitations.
    Obviously such a sea change in philosophy did not
    occur over night.
       —David Meister, The History of Human Factors and Ergonomics

                                                                29
AVIATION PSYCHOLOGY
(1940s)




                      30
WORLD WAR II COMPUTING
DIFFERENTIAL ANALYZER
(1930s)




http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:KayMcNultyAlyseSnyderSisStumpDifferentialAnalyzer.jpg   32
“
VANNEVAR BUSH
(1890 – 1974)

                    Vannevar Bush is a great name for
                    playing six degrees of separation.
                    Turn back the clock on any aspect of
                    information technology — from the
                    birth of Silicon Valley and the
                    marriage of science and the military to
                    the advent of the World Wide Web —
                    and you find his footprints. As
                    historian Michael Sherry says, "To
                    understand the world of Bill Gates
                    and Bill Clinton, start with
                    understanding Vannevar Bush.
                       —G. Pascal Zachary, The Godfather


                                                         33
ANALOG   DIGITAL



                   34
35
36
MECHANICAL   ELECTRONIC



                          37
ENIGMA MACHINE




                 38
COLLOSSUS
(1940)




            39
“
ALAN TURING
(1912 – 1954)

                                                                              I believe that at the end of the
                                                                              century the use of words and
                                                                              general educated opinion will
                                                                              have altered so much that one
                                                                              will be able to speak of
                                                                              machines thinking without
                                                                              expecting to be contradicted.
                                                                                 —Mind, vol. 59, #236 (1950)




http://www.alanturing.net/turing_archive/graphics/photos%20of%20Turing/photoindex.htm                        40
“   Numerical integration is where you take the path of a bullet
    from the time it leaves the muzzle of the gun until it reaches
    the ground. It is a very complex equation; it has about
    fifteen multiplications and a square root and I don’t know
    what else. You have to find out where the bullet is every
    10th of a second from the time it leaves the muzzle of the
    gun, and you have to take into account all the things that
    are going to affect the path of the bullet.
                                                 —Kathleen McNulty




                                                                 41
ENIAC
(1946)




http://mrsec.wisc.edu/Edetc/SlideShow/slides/computer/eniac.html   42
ENIAC
(1946)




http://www.columbia.edu/acis/history/eniac4.png
                                                  43
“   The principle flaw was ENIAC’s inability to hold
    easily altered instructions in its memory. Every
    time the machine needed reprogramming,
    operators had to run around the room turning
    dials, throwing switches, replugging cables, and
    rolling function tables about.
    It was realized that this whole method of
    programming was a clumsy method, and
    archaic… but it did not matter with firing tables,
    which permitted the same program to run for
    weeks.
                           —Joel Shurkin, Engines of the Mind
                                                           44
VON NEUMANN ARCHITECTURE
(1945)




                           45
JOHN VON NEUMANN


                                                       “
(1903 – 1957)

                                                                 It would appear that we have
                                                                 reached the limits of what it is
                                                                 possible to achieve with
                                                                 computer technology, although
                                                                 one should be careful with such
                                                                 statements, as they tend to
                                                                 sound pretty silly in 5 years.




http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:JohnvonNeumann-LosAlamos.gif
                                                                                                46
NEXT WEEK
Computing Technology in the Workplace
_The First Business Computers
_Man-Computer Symbiosis
_The Cognitive and the Physical
_The Command Line

PAPERS DUE

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History of Interaction Design Before Computers

Editor's Notes

  1. Mathematician and economist Used principles of mass production technology Adam Smith’s pin making factory Where individual workers are slower than specialized workers Would eventually be replaced by pin making machine
  2. All it could really do is add! (Or count.)
  3. Machine would be able to be programmed with cards and perform conditional operations Much more similar to the design of a modern computer with: • Store (Memory, where variables can be retained and acted upon later) • Mill (CPU, where variables are brought to be processed) Two sets of punched cards: • Operation cards for programming • Variable cards for data
  4. Mandated by the constitution, we have never missed a census Previous technological innovation was a box with a roll of paper, helped keep columns neat Growth in people in the US matched by growth in # of questions asked Concern that it would so long to compile the census that it wouldn’t be finished before the next one started
  5. Hollerith saw a “punch photograph” on a train -- punched ticket with holes for male, hair color, height, etc Tested out his machine with NY health department Complex system required holes to mean multiple things when punched in combination (like shift key) Success led to a contract with the census One variable required punching a billion holes. Each day they dealt with a stack of paper taller than the washington monument.
  6. The results of a tabulation are displayed on the clock-like dials. A sorter is on the right. On the tabletop below the dials are a Pantographic card punch (explained below) on left and the card reading station ("press") on the right, in which metal pins pass through the holes, making contact with little wells of mercury, completing an electrical circuit. All of these devices are fed manually, one card at a time, but the tabulator and sorter are electrically coupled.
  7. Each completed circuit caused an electromagnet to advance a counting dial by one number. The tabulator's 40 dials allowed the answers to several questions to be counted simultaneously. At the end of the day, the total on each dial was recorded by hand and the dial set back to zero. 1. The circuit-closing press ("card reader") 2. diagram of press 3. hand insertion of card into a sorter compartment that opened automatically based on the values punched into the card 4. tallying the day's results. The work was not fun for the young women who operated the machines, many of whom were driven to near madness by the monotony of the work. Mechanics came in frequently to fix the machines. The problem was that someone had extracted the mercury with an eyedropper and squirted it out, so she could get a little rest. Hollerith grew upset that his workers were relaxing in the bathroom. Rigged a set of filed-down nails in the toilet seat and ran wires from them to an engine in his office. He would spy on workers through a peep hole and if he thought they spent too long sitting on the toilet, he would turn a crank and send a jolt of electricity to rouse them from their throne.
  8. Eventually Hollerith’s Tabulating Machine company went on to work for railroads, had a patent battle over the 1910 census, and sold the company. In 1911, financier Charles R. Flint directed the merger of the International Time Recording Company, the Computing Scale Company and the Tabulating Machine Company to form the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company (CTR). In 1914 Thomas J. Watson, Sr., was named general manager of CTR. Watson emphasized research and engineering, and introduced into the company his famous motto “THINK.”
  9. In 1924, the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company adopted the name International Business Machines Corporation.
  10. Top salesman at NCR (National Cash Register) Unethical business practices where he would buy up second hand machines and sell them cheaply, to put other secondhand sellers out of business Took the fall for this and was fired Became President of CTR, later changed to IBM IBM was immune to recessions because of the “rent and refill” nature of the business Machines were rented and customers had to purchase special cards from IBM Like razors and blades, or cameras and film Even if they didn’t get any new customers they still made money Cards themselves were 10% of sales but 30-40% of profits
  11. Early punch card inputs based on the size of the card, IBM went from 45 to 80 columns in the 30s, Remington Rand came out with a 90 col card. Limits to sizes of cards based on physical properties, too many punches and the card would become unstable. This impacted computers up until the GUI, the size of the terminal window was based on the size of the IBM punch card. In a typical punch card installation, the same operation was performed on all the records in a files as a deck of cards went through a tabulator or other machine. The UNIVAC and its successors could operate that way but they could also perform a long sequence of operations on a single datum before fetching the next record from memory. In punched card terms, that would require carrying a deck of a singe card around the room, Hardly an economical use of the machinery or the people. Processing information gathered into a deck of cards was entrenched into business practices by the mid-1930s and reinforced by the deep penetration of the punched card equipment salesmen into the accounting offices of their customers. Loren Wilton (of Burroughs/Unisys, who worked with early IBM gear while in college) recalls (31 Dec 2003): The Backspace key was only useful in the rare case that you spaced past a column that you needed to punch; you could backspace and restrike the column. Of course if the column was mispunched, you swore under your breath, hit the release key to feed the current card, duped up to the error using the next blank card, then continued punching from that point. When you released this card (or it auto-released after column 80) you quickly grabbed the mis-punched card out of the flipper as it was being stacked and threw it in the trashcan, which was invariably on the left side of the keypunch for this purpose.
  12. Taylor's methods began from his observation that, in general, workers forced to perform repetitive tasks work at the slowest rate that goes unpunished. Taylorism is a variation on the theme of efficiency; it is a late-19th-and-early-20th-century instance of the larger recurring theme in human life of increasing efficiency, decreasing waste, and using empirical methods (time and motion studies) to decide what matters. Taylorism can be seen as the division of labour pushed to its logical extreme, with a consequent de-skilling of the worker and dehumanisation of the workplace.
  13. • Shift in decision making from employees to managers -- division of labor • Develop a standard method for performing each job -- decisions based upon tradition and rules of thumb should be replaced by precise procedures developed after careful study of an individual at work • Select workers with appropriate abilities for each job -- fit the man to the job • Train workers in the standard method previously developed • Support workers by planning their work and eliminating interruptions -- give rest breaks • Provide wage incentives to workers for increased output Six Sigma or Lean Manufacturing compared with “Design Thinking”
  14. What changed that was the war
  15. In 1943 Lt. Alphonse Chapanis was called on to figure out why pilots and copilots of P-47s, B-17s, and B-25s frequently retracted the wheels instead of the flaps after landing. Chapanis, who was the only psychologist at Wright Field until the end of the war, was not familiar with the ongoing studies of human factors in equipment design. Still, he immediately noticed that the side-by-side wheel and flap controls-in most cases identical toggle switches or nearly identical levers-could easily be confused. He also noted that the corresponding controls on the C-47 were not adjacent and their methods of actuation were quite different; hence C-47 copilots never pulled up the wheels after landing.Chapanis realized that the so-called pilot errors were really cockpit design errors and that by coding the shapes and modes-of-operation of controls the problem could be solved. As an immediate wartime fix, a small, rubber-tired wheel was attached to the end of the wheel control and a small wedge-shaped end to the flap control on several types of airplanes, and the pilots and copilots of the modified planes stopped retracting their wheels after landing. When the war was over, these mnemonically shape-coded wheel and flap controls were standardized worldwide, as were the tactually discriminable heads of the power control levers found in conventional airplanes today. Human factors concerns emerged during World War II as a result of the work and experience of a number of specialists involved in the study of then-current manned systems. These systems included those operating on the earth’s surface, under the sea, and in space. Human factors studies were made of: systems performance problems encountered in information presentation, detection, and recognition related action controls workspace arrangement, and skills required Research in these areas ensued, with particular emphasis on human operations. This offered the opportunity for early improvements in performance and safety, as significant modifications of equipment were unlikely under wartime circumstances. Attention was focused on operations analysis, operator selection, training, and the environment associated with signal detection and recognition, communication, and vehicle control. Concurrently, human factors work in industry was focused on efficiency, task analysis, and time-and-motion studies. With the coming of peace, human factors activity was broadened to include systems design more completely. As a result, human factors requirements were incorporated into government phased-procurement contracts with industry. This led to the utilization of human factors specialists by industry and gradually resulted in their involvement in nonmilitary systems and equipment.
  16. What was the first computer used during WWII
  17. During World War I, Bush had known the lack of cooperation between civilian scientists and the military. Concerned about the lack of coordination in scientific research in the U.S. and the need for mobilization for defense, Bush in 1939 proposed a general directive agency in the Federal Government. When the Germans invaded France, Bush decided speed was important and contacted President Roosevelt directly. He managed to get a meeting with the President on 12 June 1940 and took a single sheet of paper describing the proposed agency. Roosevelt approved it in ten minutes. During 1941 the NDRC was subsumed into the Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD) with Bush as director, which controlled the Manhattan Project until 1943 (when administration was assumed by the Army) and which also coordinated scientific research during World War II. ORSD eventually by 1950 became the National Science Foundation (NSF), which funds university professors, and the Advanced Research Project Agency (ARPA), the Pentagon's chief avenue for basic research, which may be familiar to you from the ARPANET, the precursor to the internet.
  18. What’s the difference? An analog computer (spelled analogue in British English) is a form of computer that uses the continuously-changeable aspects of physical phenomena such as electrical,[1] mechanical, or hydraulic quantities to model the problem being solved. In contrast, digital computers represent varying quantities incrementally, as their numerical values change.
  19. Bill Tutte, a cryptanalyst at Bletchley Park, discovered that the keystream produced by the machine exhibited statistical biases deviating from random, and that these biases could be used to break the cipher and read messages. Colossus was the first combining digital, (partially) programmable, and electronic. The first fully programmable digital electronic computer was the ENIAC which was completed in 1946. By V-E day a total of 10 Collossi were in use at Bletchley Park
  20. Electronic Numerical Integrator and Calculator Built for ballistics research to calculate trajectories of projectiles Calculating 1 trajectory took 20 hours using slide rules Needed to calculate hundreds of trajectories, which took thousands of hours Electronic Numerical Integrator (or ENIAC) could calculate a trajectory in 1 second Could be reconfigured to perform limitless steps and iterative loops of operations But NOT a stored program device
  21. 18,000 vacuum tubes Used standard IBM punch cards for input and output Cables, plugged into large plugboards, handled programming (sequence of operations) Took two days to make all the necessary connections to set up a new problem Once set up, might solve that problem in minutes
  22. By rewiring the computer, people transformed it into a different special purpose computer each time More modern computers could do that automatically Here a person had to do it ENIAC was a transitional device that had high processing speed and was flexible But had many of the limitations of calculators, tedious setup, decimal rather than binary
  23. The earliest computing machines had fixed programs. Some very simple computers still use this design, either for simplicity or training purposes. For example, a desk calculator (in principle) is a fixed program computer. It can do basic mathematics, but it cannot be used as a word processor or a gaming console. Changing the program of a fixed-program machine requires re-wiring, re-structuring, or re-designing the machine. The earliest computers were not so much "programmed" as they were "designed". "Reprogramming", when it was possible at all, was a laborious process, starting with flowcharts and paper notes, followed by detailed engineering designs, and then the often-arduous process of physically re-wiring and re-building the machine. A stored-program digital computer is one that keeps its programmed instructions, as well as its data, in read-write, random-access memory (RAM). Stored-program computers were an advancement over the program-controlled computers of the 1940s, such as the Colossus and the ENIAC, which were programmed by setting switches and inserting patch leads to route data and to control signals between various functional units. In the vast majority of modern computers, the same memory is used for both data and program instructions.
  24. Hungarian American[1] mathematician who made major contributions to a vast range of fields,[2] including set theory, functional analysis, quantum mechanics, ergodic theory, continuous geometry, economics and game theory, computer science, numerical analysis, hydrodynamics (of explosions), and statistics, as well as many other mathematical fields. He is generally regarded as one of the foremost mathematicians of the 20th century.