Alan Cooper
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alan Cooper, an advocate of interaction design, runs a design company and writes books about how to make software user interfaces more usable.
Cooper is sometimes called "the father of Visual Basic", although much of work on Visual Basic was done by Microsoft's internal development group. Cooper was the leading force behind VB 1.0 and pioneered the use of an IDE to create a GUI via wrapped calls to system routines in the API (see Adapter pattern).
Cooper's original programs were called "Tripod" and later "Ruby". They were intended as more of an end-user tool, but development at Microsoft led to Visual Basic becoming a tool for programmers instead.
[edit] Bibliography
- About Face: The Essentials of User Interface Design (ISBN 1-56884-322-4)
- The Inmates Are Running the Asylum: Why High-Tech Products Drive Us Crazy and How to Restore the Sanity (ISBN 0-672-31649-8)
- About Face 2.0: The Essentials of Interaction Design (with Robert Reimann) (ISBN 0-7645-2641-3)
- About Face 3: The Essentials of Interaction Design (with Robert Reimann and David Cronin) (ISBN 0-4700-8411-1)
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Cooper Consulting
- Alan Cooper Interview on .NET Rocks Radio
- Conversation with Alan Cooper at Channel 9
- Alan Cooper on Ruby and why he was called "the Father of Visual Basic"
- SEOV: Visions of Alan Cooper (Video Interviews)
| Preceded by JoAnn Hackos |
ACM SIGDOC Rigo Award 2004 |
Succeeded by – |

