| Man-machine console facilities for computer-aided design |
| Full text |
Pdf
(663 KB)
|
| Source
|
AFIPS Joint Computer Conferences
archive
Proceedings of the May 21-23, 1963, spring joint computer conference
table of contents
Detroit, Michigan
SESSION: Computer aided design
table of contents
Pages 323-328
Year of Publication: 1963
|
|
Author
|
|
Robert Stotz
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
|
| Sponsor |
|
| Publisher |
|
| Bibliometrics |
Downloads (6 Weeks): 3, Downloads (12 Months): 14, Citation Count: 7
|
|
|
ABSTRACT
The backbone of the man-machine communication link in Computer-Aided Design is a console whose principal components are the display scope and the light pen. The display scope is an ordinary cathode ray tube which is controlled by the computer by means of program instructions. It allows the computer to output to the man rapidly in easily interpreted graphical form. The data displayed can be textual, pictorial, or a combination of the two. The light pen is a photosensitive device which responds to the light generated by an intensified point on the scope face and which amplifies, shapes and transmits this response back to the computer where it can be tested by the program and used as a branch condition. The display scope and light pen form, so to speak, the paper and pencil of the designer, but they possess some extremely useful additional properties which open a whole new expressive medium. The following papers describe some of the fascinating and invaluable facilities which are provided by this basically simple hardware. In this paper we present some basic information about the hardware itself and describe some of the sophistications appropriate to the Computer-Aided Design problem.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
| |
1
|
Investigations in Computer-Aided Design, Interim Report No. 1, Report 8436-IR-1, Electronic Systems Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, January 1961.
|
| |
2
|
Stotz, R. H., "Specialized Computer Equipment for Generation and Display of Three-Dimensional Curvilinear Figures," Report ESL-TM-167, Electronic Systems Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, February 1963.
|
 |
3
|
|
| |
4
|
Randa, Glenn C., "Design of A Remote Display Console," Report ESL-R-132, Electronic Systems Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, February 1962.
|
| |
5
|
Gurley, B. M., and Woodward, C. E., "Light-Pen Links Computer to Operator," Electronics, Vol. 32, No. 47, November 20, 1959.
|
CITED BY 9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
D. E. Rippy , D. E. Humphries, Magic: a machine for automatic graphics interface to a computer, Proceedings of the November 30--December 1, 1965, fall joint computer conference, part I, November 30-December 01, 1965, Las Vegas, Nevada
|
|
|
Barrett Hargreaves , John D. Joyce , George L. Cole , Ernest D. Foss , Richard G. Gray , Elmer M. Sharp , Robert J. Sippel , Thomas M. Spellman , Robert A. Thorpe, Image processing hardware for a man-machine graphical communication system, Proceedings of the October 27-29, 1964, fall joint computer conference, part I, October 27-29, 1964, San Francisco, California
|
|
|
|
|
|
M. R. Davis , T. O. Ellis, The RAND tablet: a man-machine graphical communication device, Proceedings of the October 27-29, 1964, fall joint computer conference, part I, October 27-29, 1964, San Francisco, California
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|