Every time you move a mouse, resize a window, connect to a local network, or print a document, you're using something invented at one lab between 1970 and the early 1980s. That lab is PARC — and its story is one of tech history's strangest: a research center that produced more foundational inventions than almost any institution ever, inside a company that failed to profit from most of them.
Why It Existed
By the late 1960s, Xerox's copier business had a ceiling. Chief Scientist Jack Goldman proposed a research lab physically separated from Xerox's Rochester operations, with one mandate: invent technology unrelated to what Xerox already sold. PARC opened on 1 July 1970, led by physicist George Pake, who assembled a team so dense that nearly half the world's top 100 computer scientists were connected to it by the mid-1970s.
What Came Out of It
The list is almost implausible for one decade:
- The Alto — first GUI-based personal computer
- The modern computer mouse, refined into standard form
- Ethernet, invented by Bob Metcalfe and David Boggs
- The laser printer — the one invention Xerox actually commercialized
- Smalltalk, the first object-oriented language
- Ubiquitous computing, pioneered by Mark Weiser
The Steve Jobs Visit
In December 1979, Steve Jobs toured PARC and saw the GUI and mouse. Apple built the Macintosh from what he saw — but Xerox had already tried commercializing it as the Xerox Star, priced at $100,000. The problem wasn't theft; it was that Xerox priced for a market that didn't exist yet.
Legacy
Four PARC researchers won the Turing Award. In 2023, Xerox donated PARC to SRI International. The gap between inventing the future and shipping it never closed — but almost everything you touch on a screen today traces back to this one lab.
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