Subject: Re: [Hidden-tech] need thoughts on future search tools for
kid's book
Steven Solomon
ssol at interactiveguild.com
Wed May 7 10:45:27 EDT 2008
Folks,
Jan Werner Wrote:
> So why aren't we flying around like the Jetsons yet?
We've got other problems to solve; environmental issues, fuel bottles
necks, clean water, childhood mortality, education and nutrition for
the disadvantaged, stupid wars, entrenched business and political
interests, etc. All of those problems are part of a bundle, of
course. So, despite several companies working for years to get us
that Jetson flying car, we're going to have to wait until we deal
with some practical problems.
> I recall attending a conference sponsored by Digital Research in
> Boston about 25 years ago to promote CP/M-86 (remember that?) for
> the IBM PC at which a Digital Equipment (remember them?) engineer
> replied, when asked about the "paperless office" (which the
> visionaries were then touting) that it was about as likely to catch
> on as the paperless bathroom.
Hah! If you recall some years ago Xerox touted the paperless office.
Then relatively affordable Laser printers arrived and the amount of
PC generated paper exploded. After a couple of years of flailing
about, Xerox became "The Document Company" again. Interestingly, the
Laser Printer was invented by Xerox around the time they pioneered
and attempted to commercialize networked local computers (The Alto)
and their printers.
Whoops.
> And then there are those who have been saying for decades that the
> keyboard will go away because of improvements in voice recognition.
> Aside from the fact that even a moderately good typist can enter
> data much faster than one can speak it (except perhaps for the guy
> in the old Fed-Ex commercials), can you imagine working in an
> office with 50 people talking to their computers all day long?
Interesting conundrum. One solution to the problem is noise canceling
head phones, but what boss will put up with an office full of
chattering employees who can here the phone ring or that boss'
hectoring? The challenge is more social and organizational that
technological. Still as Jan points out, most folks are more
comfortable typic that speaking extemporaneously.
> As Yogi said, it's hard to predict things, especially about the
> future.
Back in the late 1980s I heard the guy, Andy Lippman, from MIT's
Media lab speak. He held up a bar of soap and told the audience that
he was going to predict the future. Some day soon, he claimed, we
would have computers not much larger that that bar of soap. He the
then admonished to crowd to never try to predict things more that
five or ten years out. Within a few years, of course the Apple
Newton, then the Palm, then mobile Windows on tiny devices hit the
stores. Interestingly, he sort explained how folks in the 1930's got
it so wrong about us all having autogyros to fly to the grocery store.
S
Steven Solomon
Writer, Inventor, Near Futurist
ssol at interactiveguild.com
http://www.interactiveguild.com
Home Office: 413.585.0229
In The Maze of a Networked World, We Help You See Around Corners.
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