Jef Raskin died of cancer on Saturday February 26th after being sick for several months. A wonderful spirit and renaissance man, who inspired me and many others. He created the Macintosh project at Apple in 1979, naming it after his favorite apple. He left Apple to form Information Appliances, where he designed the Canon Cat with an innovative interface. He continued refining human interface design, publishing his ideas in The Humane Interface (Addison Wesley, 2000.) The Humane Interface ideas are being implemented in the Raskin Center project Archy, MORE for more of information including web quality and high resolution photographs you can download go to Http://www.jefthemovie.com/obit.htm Jef is a musician, he builds model planes, loves archery, ping pong, and racing cars. He's a mathematician, and an interface
designer with a mission: to help you fall back in love with your computer. We also need technical advisors and model plane enthusiasts who can fly airplanes upside down, as well as footage to show how computers aren't serving users. We'll be shooting in New York, Colorado, Pacifica California, Cupertino, San Diego and Brentwood. |
Macintosh
Creator and "Humane Interface" author Jef
Raskin To view video click these links: Many of you are asking why this footage is not available in MPEG or Quicktime? We're working on it but wanted to make some footage available asap. Email us for details on what's to come. We're looking for donations of server space, equipment and software and to complete the project. If you can help please write to us. Jennie Bourne | Beyond Creating the Macintosh An evangelist for humane interfaces and a gifted teacher. When you talk with Jef, you realize that computers can be better. This project was inspired by a lecture Jef gave at Fast Net Futures in 2004. It documents his work on a humane environment he calls "Archy," that works with the way we think and the life that helped him create it. |
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Video best viewed with Windows Media Player 9 and DSL or Cable Special Thanks to the Sugar Family for lending us the equipment to shoot our interviews with Jef. |
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The Movie Jef's Notes on our Movie full text of Jef's notes My name will always be associated with something I did a quarter of a century ago: the creation of the Macintosh computer project when I worked at Apple. I cannot duck that connection, nor would I want to. It is an achievement of which anybody would be proud: the Mac was instrumental in changing the way computers look and feel, and the way in which they are used. The changes were based on a deeply-held code of the right and wrong ways to treat my fellow humans, and a study of psychology more than on any desire to advance technology per se, though it was necessary to do that, too in order to achieve my primary aims. I was working on a far better way to use technology and writing two books when I recently learned that I have an incurable cancer. One book was to be "The Mac and Me", a personal history, a corrective to decades of misinformation on the origins and principles behind the Mac, and a tribute to my parents who taught the importance of uncompromising moral integrity by example. It was to be an autobiography that would tell what it was like to be with Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak in their garage in 1976, and to chart the changes, some funny and some ugly, that prominence and wealth brought out from theirs' and others' personalities. There will be some of that here. he other book, "Archy: A Humane Computer Environment" was to describe a better approach to using computers; the system I call "Archy". Its advantages are obvious to beginners and ordinary users, but quite out of the main stream and difficult to understand for many of those immersed in current methods We Need You to Design a Great Film We're looking for guidance, your stories, your footage, and contributions of money, equipment, web and programming skills to keep the project going. Our vision will lead, supported by Jef himself. But you can help to guide our shooting, our editorial choices, and even the style and the direction we take. If you have the skills and time, your footage could become part of the film. Especially if you have access to the people who made computer history, share Jef's passions like model airplanes or music, or can illustrate how computers should be better in a funny or insightful way. View Footage on the Web - Make Edit Suggestions |
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The Shape of Things To Come The next step is the edit - which 30 seconds of a 30 minute interview catch the essence and advance the film? No more darkened cutting room with pros agonizing over decisions. we can involve dozens of eyes joining us over the net. With the net, we can make make several "director's cuts", or in this case, "netizen cuts". One view of the material might focus on computers and history; a second on interface design going forward, still another on how one genius created a very unique life and the role of that life in fostering inovative work. In the end the project will have a life of its own. We'll keep much of the process live on the net for those who crave more detail than our final cut allows. Most documentary footage including outtakes is preserved in obscure film archives, available only to scholars. We can do better. Raskin Lectures on Interface |
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Jef the Movie | First Movie Made on the Web | Beyond Creating the Macintosh | the Humane Interface |