Upcoming Talks & Events New Work & Activities On-line Talks & Interviews Biography Papers, Videos, CV,...
Recent Columns & Essays Lincoln Lab History NRC History Personal Pages Related Links

Birch Bark Canoe Project:
In the late summer of 2010, three friends and I realized a plan that was 3 years in the making:  to paddle part of the old fur trade route in Northern Saskatchewan, and to do so in traditional birch bark canoes.  Of course, you need a canoe to do so.  To learn more about the trip and the construction of the canoe, click on the picture above.

Sketching User Experiences:
Available in English, Chinese and Korean. The English language book can be ordered from the normal on-line vendors such as amazon.com and chapters.ca, and is also available as an e-book for the Kindle.

Sketching User Experiences: The Workbook:
An inexpensive workbook to support the practice an learning of experience sketching is English, Chinese, German, and Korean.

Sketching UX Resources:
A web site with slide decks to teaching, videos, exercises, etc. to support teaching, practicing/, learnig & coaching.

Buxton Collection 

 The "Buxton Collection" is a collection of interactive devices that I have been collecting for about 35 years.  This site, created with my colleagues from Microsoft Research, documents the collection, and is intended as a resource for those interested in design, user experience, and the history of interaction.

Since only about 1/2 the collection is yet on-line, here is the current complete catalogue.

This is a prototype video to explore how we plan to add narratives that link the devices in the collection.  And, mia culpa,  in the very first example, I misattribute the mouse as being from the 1982 Xerox 8010 Star workstation, whereas it is actually from the follow-up system, the Xerox 6085 "Viewpoint" workstation.  Sigh.

William (Bill) Buxton OC

2 Alfresco Lawn
Toronto, Ontario
Canada M4E 1A1

Tel: +1 (416) 845-0193

bill@billbuxton.com
wasbuxton
wasbuxton

 
 
 

Ultimately, we are deluding ourselves if we think that the products that we design are the "things" that we sell, rather than the individual, social and cultural experience that they engender, and the values and impact that they instill. Design that ignores this is not worthy of the name. (Personal mantra.)


Upcoming Talks & Events:.

Over the past few years I have done few public talks, etc. Freed-up from corporate responsibilities, I am  reengaging. Upcoming talks will be posted here:

Recent Talks:


Selected Columns & Essays


Selected Work & Activities


On-line Talks & Interviews


Biography:

Bill Buxton is a relentless advocate for innovation, design, and - especially - the appropriate consideration of human values, capacity, and culture in the conception, implementation, and use of new products and technologies.  This is reflected in his research, teaching, talks, and writing - including his past columns on design and innovation for BusinessWeek.com, his book, Sketching User Experiences. (2007), and as co-author of Auditory Interfaces. (2022). He is currently working as an independent, focusing on the curation of his collection of more than 800 devices tracing the history of human-computer interaction. In 2023 Buxton was appointed Officer of the Order of Canada "For his groundbreaking research and innovations in human-computer interaction and user-centred design."

From December 2005 to December 2022, Bill was a Partner Researcher at Microsoft Research. Prior to that, he was Principal of his own Toronto-based boutique design and consulting firm, Buxton Design.

He began his career as a composer and performer, having done a Bachelor of Music degree at Queen's University. He then studied and taught for two years at the Institute of Sonology, Utrecht, The Netherlands.

In 1975 Bill started designing his own digital musical instruments.  This is what led him to the Dynamic Graphics Project (DGP) at the , at first as an artist in residence.  This led to his earning an MSc in Computer Science, after which he joined the faculty of the Department of Computer Science, where he currently has an Adjunct Professor appointment.  It is this path which led him to the field of human-computer interaction, his technical area of specialty.

From 1987-89, Buxton was in Cambridge England, helping establish a new satellite of Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center (EuroPARC).  From 1989-94 he split his time between Toronto, where he was Scientific Director of the Ontario Telepresence Project, and Palo Alto, California, where he was a consulting researcher at Xerox PARC.

From 1994 until December 2002, he was Chief Scientist of Alias|Wavefront, (now part of Autodesk) and from 1995, its parent company SGI Inc.  In the fall of 2004, he became a part-time instructor in the Department of Industrial Design at the Ontario College of Art and Design.  In 2004/05 he was also Visiting Professor at the Knowledge Media Design Institute (KMDI) at the University of Toronto.

In 1995, Buxton became the third recipient of the Canadian Human-Computer Communications Society Award for contributions to research in computer graphics and human-computer interaction.  In 2000 he was given the New Media Visionary of the Year Award at the Canadian New Media Awards.  In 2001, The Hollywood Reporter named him one of the 10 most influential innovators in Hollywood.  In 2002, Time Magazine named him one of the top 5 designers in Canada.  Also in 2002, he was elected to the CHI Academy.  In October, 2005, he and Gordon Kurtenbach received the "Lasting Impact Award", from ACM UIST 2005, which was awarded for their 1991 paper, Issues in Combining Marking and Direct Manipulation Techniques.  In 2008 he became the 10th recipient of the ACM SIGCHI Lifetime Achievement Award, "for fundamental contributions to the field of Computer Human Interaction."  In 2009 he was elected Fellow of the Association of Computing Machinery (ACM), for his contributions to the field of human-computer interaction, and in 2011 he became the first recipient of the annual Grand Canadian Digital Media Pioneer Award.

Buxton has been awarded four doctorates Honoris Causa: Doctor of Design from the Ontario College of Art and Design, Toronto, Ontario (June, 2007), Doctor of Laws from his alma mater, Queen's University, Kingston Ontario (June, 2009), Doctor of Industrial Design, from the Technical University of Eindhoven, The Netherlands (April, 2010), where he was also appointed Distinguished Professor (October, 2010), and Doctor of Science from his alma mater, The University of Toronto (June, 2013), where he serves as an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Computer Science.

From 1998-2004, Buxton was on the board of the Canadian Film Centre, and in 1998-99 chaired a panel to advise the premier of Ontario on developing long term policy to foster innovation, through the Ontario Jobs and Investment Board. He is on the advisory board of the Department of Industrial Design of the Technical University in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, the President's Advisory Board of the Ontario College of Art and Design, the Advisory Council of The Mountaineer's Legends and Lore book series, and in 2018 joined the National Council of the Canadian Canoe Museum, where he is also a member of the Collections Committee. Buxton is a member of the Association of Computing Machinery and the Industrial Designers Society of America.

Outside of work, Buxton loves the outdoors. He is especially passionate about mountains, including skiing, climbing, and touring. This interest extends to the written word. He has contributed to the literature on mountain history and exploration, is an avid bibliophile, and was on the jury of the 2005 Banff Mountain Book Festival.  He is an accomplished equestrian, and in 1996 was awarded the Veteran Rider of the Year award from the Ontario Horse Trials Association, and in 2000 was named to the Talent Squad of the National Eventing Team.  In addition, he is an avid cyclist, and active paddler - kayaks and canoes.  Finally, he has a life-long fascination with both art and his wife, the artist Elizabeth Russ, owner and operator of Toronto-based Studio 888, a  gallery whose mission is the promotion of emerging local artists.


Papers, Videos, CV, ...


Personal Pages


MIT Lincoln Lab History Project

I am interested in the contribution made to interactive computing and computer graphics by the researchers at MIT's Lincoln Lab in the 1950's and 60's. Consequently, I organized a panel including some of the key protagonists at the 2005 SIGCHI Conference in Portland Oregon, and I have started a web page which is intended to be a clearing house for some of the material on and by the researchers of the group, which was mainly centred around the TX-2 computer. The page now includes a video of the panel session, including the examples. See the following work in progress:

Resource Page on Early HCI Research of the Lincoln Lab TX-2 Group


NRC of Canada History Project in Computer Music & Animation

The work in computer music and animation in the early 1970's at the National Research Council of Canada was extremely important in the field of human-computer interaction - not just music and animation.  This is where I first saw and used a computer, and that experience had a huge impact on shaping my career.  The music work, in particular, is not well known.  The following a book chapter contains a summary of the system, my personal experience using it, as well as my comments on its importance.  Through the cooperation of the NRC and especially my friend and mentor Marceli Wein, I was able to get some historic 16mm film footage of these systems digitized.  These can be viewed on my YouTube channel as follows:


Related Links:

Last updated December 31, 2023