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Larry Tesler
American computer scientist

Larry Tesler

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American computer scientist
A.K.A.
Lawrence Gordon Tesler
Gender
Male
Place of birth
The Bronx, USA
Age
74 years
Larry Tesler
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Lawrence Gordon Tesler (April 24, 1945 – February 16, 2020) was an American computer scientist who worked in the field of human–computer interaction. Tesler worked at Xerox PARC, Apple, Amazon, and Yahoo!

While at PARC, Tesler's work included Smalltalk, the first dynamic object-oriented programming language, and Gypsy, the first word processor with a graphical user interface for the Xerox Alto. During this, along with colleague Tim Mott, Tesler developed the idea of copy and paste functionality and the idea of modeless software. While at Apple, Tesler worked on the Apple Lisa and the Apple Newton, and helped to develop Object Pascal and its use in application programming toolkits including MacApp.

Biography

Early career

Tesler grew up in New York City and graduated from the Bronx High School of Science in 1961.He went on to Stanford University, where he studied computer science in the 1960s. There, he did some programming jobs on the side, and after graduation, worked as a consultant offering his programming services in the area. As he was one of only a few computer programmers listed in the Palo Alto phone directory he received a good deal of work. However, a regional recession caused this consulting work to dry up. In the late 1960s, Tesler became involved in the Midpeninsula Free University, where he taught topics such as How to end the IBM Monopoly, Computers Now, and Procrastination.Tesler also worked at Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory in the late 1960s. With Horace Enea he designed Compel, an early single assignment language. This functional programming language was intended to make concurrent processing more natural and was used to introduce programming concepts to beginners.

Xerox PARC

Tesler left Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory due to a number of factors in the early 1970s; he recognized that artificial intelligence would not be a usable technology for many years, and his marriage to his college girlfriend had recently ended in divorce. He took his daughter and moved to Oregon with a number of Vietnam War veterans who were returning there to build homes. There was little computing technology in this area and he could not get a job with the local bank, the only firm nearby with a computer system. He called Stanford to see if they had anything, and learned that Alan Kay, then a member of Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC), had been actively looking for him shortly after his departure. Kay wanted Tesler to join him at PARC. Tesler could not be hired at PARC due to a hiring freeze, so Tesler instead took a short-term project offered by Les Earnest from the Standard Artificial Intelligence Laboratory to write a "document compiler". For this. Tesler wrote Pub, recognized as one of the first uses of markup language; it was later distributed on ARPANet.

PARC approached Tesler with an offer in 1971, but wanted to place Tesler in the On-Line Office System Group. Tesler had been more interested in Xerox's work with personal computers, so he turned down the offer. By early 1973, PARC had established development of the Xerox Alto, and Tesler accepted an offer for a position splitting his time between the Office System Group and the Learning Research Group, which Kay was heading. Some of Tesler's main projects at PARC were the Gypsy word processor for the Office System Group, and Smalltalk, the first dynamic object-oriented programming language, with the Learning Research Group. While working on Gypsy, Tesler and his colleague Tim Mott started writing ideas down envisioning the future of interactive computer use, considering current text-based user interfaces would move to graphic user interfaces with icons representing documents, and to develop ease-of-use. From there, the two developed the basic copy and paste function, now a standard feature in computing. Tesler also established the idea that computer interfaces should be modeless, where all actions are available to a user at all times, rather than modal, requiring the user to enter a specific mode to perform them. Gypsy was programmed to include both of these concepts.

Tesler also was part of a team with Adele Goldberg and Douglas Fairbairn that worked on the Xerox NoteTaker, a portable computer system Alan Kay had envisioned. Tesler, then a novice to hardware programming and design, worked with Fairbairn on the design, which included the first functioning Ethernet protocol written in software rather than on hardware. Tesler and Fairbairn took the 16 kilograms (35 lb) NoteTaker prototype on cross-country trips to demonstrate the unit to Xerox executives. At one layover during the trip, Tesler and Fairbairn briefly tested the unit at an airport and while in flight, which Tesler believed was the first-ever use of a computer in these situations. The NoteTaker did not gain traction as Xerox had turned its attention back to the Xerox Alto.

Tesler was a proponent of ease-of-use for user interfaces while at PARC. Tesler is considered the origin of the phrase "user-friendly" as a measure of usability after a salesman told him that word processors were difficult to sell because they were "just so unfriendly". Tesler is also tied to the origins of the phrase "what you see is what you get"; he and his colleagues were complaining about the way documents printed out differently to their appearance on the screen. Tesler said, "What you see on the screen should be what you get when you print it." Another person simplified this to the well-known abbreviation "WYSIWYG" which gained traction as a functional goal within PARC and beyond. Tesler also is credited with coining the term "browser" after creating a Smalltalk code browser in response to a coworker having difficulty in parsing through someone else's code.

Tesler had been present during both of Steve Jobs' fateful visits to PARC in late 1979, a couple of years after Jobs had co-founded Apple Computer. During the first visit, Tesler demonstrated to Jobs the Xerox Alto, the first computer system designed around a graphical user interface (GUI). While the Alto had been a mere curiosity for Xerox, Jobs saw a huge amount of potential in graphical interface, and immediately after returning to Apple's headquarters, set his team on creating a similar graphical user interface for their first product, the Apple Lisa, incorporating additional information provided by Xerox, later refined into the first Apple Macintosh. However, while the Macintosh was Apple's flagship to becoming a major manufacturer of personal computers, Xerox fell behind.

Apple Computer

Tesler was one of several Xerox PARC employees who left the company in 1980 to join Apple Computer following Jobs' visits. Tesler said his reasons for leaving included the fact that Apple had clearly gotten the idea of computers, while Xerox still thought itself a copier company, and that he found Apple's management much more approachable than Xerox's. Tesler started at Apple in July 1980 supporting the development of the Apple Lisa, and worked for them until 1997 holding various positions including Vice President of AppleNet, Vice President of the Advanced Technology Group, and Chief Scientist.

Part of Tesler's work with the Lisa was to develop object-oriented language extensions to the Pascal programming language allowing easier manipulation of the GUI. Tesler worked with Pascal's creator, Niklaus Wirth, to develop Object Pascal in 1985 which was used to create the Lisa Toolkit. When Apple moved onto the Macintosh platform, the same concepts were brought forward to create MacApp, a similar Object Pascal-based class library for the Macintosh's GUI functions released in 1985.

Starting in 1990, Tesler was named vice president of Apple's Newton Group under the Advanced Technology Group, and led the efforts of developing the Apple Newton, one of the first personal digital assistants and predecessor of the tablet computer. However, Tesler claimed some decisions related to the Newton's release, such as deciding against an Apple-developed handwriting recognition software, over a third-party which slowed down the device, were estimated to have cost Apple millions of dollars. Tesler voluntarily left the group just before the Newton shipped in 1993 and became Apple's chief scientist within the Advanced Technology Group. He explored a number of potential projects being developed by the group, but these had been too risky for Apple at the time, so the group focused on networking strategies. By 1997, Tesler decided to leave Apple, and one of his last acts was to shutter the Advanced Technology Group as Apple was financially struggling, too much to support such a research program at that time.

In 1991, Tesler contributed the article"Networked Computing in the 1990s" to Scientific American Special Issue on Communications, Computers, and Networks, September 1991.

Post Apple

One of the last programs that Tesler oversaw at Apple was a programming language aimed for use by schoolchildren named Cocoa (unrelated to the Cocoa application programming interface later released by Apple). With Apple's permission, Tesler spunout and co-founded Stagecast Software in Palo Alto in 1997, where his small team further developed Stagecast Creator, a programming environment aimed for educational uses that had been under development at Apple. Stagecast Creator was released in 1999, just at the time that the education market had turned financially downhill, and sales of the program were not sufficient to keep the company in business. Tesler dismissed most of the employees in mid-2000, and he himself left, leaving two employees to continue the company.

Tesler joined Amazon in Seattle in October 2001. Initially he had been hired as a vice president of engineering, and was shortly thereafter promoted to the vice president of shopping experience, where he helped to improve the Amazon website interface, including developing its book preview program. However, with his wife still living in the Silicon Valley area, he opted to quit Amazon and moved back to Silicon Valley in 2005 to join Yahoo! as vice president of their User Experience and Design group.

In November 2008, Tesler left Yahoo! to join personal genetics information company 23andMe as product fellow, but left the company the following year. From December 2009, he was an independent consultant.

Personal life

Tesler maintained his strong preference for modeless software well beyond his time at PARC. To promote his preference, as of 2010, Tesler equipped his automobile with a personalized California license plate with the license number "NO MODES". Along with others, he had also been using the phrase "Don't Mode Me In" for years, as a rally cry to eliminate or reduce modes.

Tesler died on February 16, 2020, at the age of 74.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQ
Who is Larry Tesler?
Larry Tesler was an American computer scientist who is best known for his work in human-computer interaction and user interface design. He is widely recognized for his contributions to the development of the cutting-edge technologies such as copy and paste, cut and paste, and search and replace.
When and where was Larry Tesler born?
Larry Tesler was born on April 24, 1945, in New York City, United States.
What are some of Larry Tesler's notable achievements?
Some of Larry Tesler's notable achievements include the development of the concepts of "cut," "copy," and "paste" commands, search and replace functions, overlapping windows, modeless editing, and the find and replace feature. He was also a major contributor to the creation of the Smalltalk programming language and the macOS.
What was Larry Tesler's educational background?
Larry Tesler earned his bachelor's degree in mathematics from Stanford University in 1965. He then went on to pursue a master's degree in computer science at Stanford, which he completed in 1973.
When did Larry Tesler pass away?
Larry Tesler passed away on February 17, 2020, at the age of 74 in Portola Valley, California.
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