Author

Topic: Internet: Computers beyond computing (Read 1158 times)

legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1014
In Satoshi I Trust
October 11, 2014, 02:33:52 PM
#4
love it, thank you  Smiley
hero member
Activity: 672
Merit: 500
October 10, 2014, 01:35:28 PM
#3
Yeah, there was a time when computers meant only word processing and spreadsheets, later internet only meant email, and phone was only for conversations. Now computers, internet and phone envelopes everything.

I sure hope bitcoin or blockchain technology will be "everything" in the future.

full member
Activity: 152
Merit: 100
August 12, 2014, 10:18:57 PM
#2
Internet is one big communication network and computer is mainly use as a gateway to access information.

Government and bureaucracy are the main reason documents sharing is needed.
legendary
Activity: 1834
Merit: 1094
Learning the troll avoidance button :)
August 12, 2014, 09:47:09 PM
#1
How things have changed over the decades
I thought this rings a classic tune to where Bitcoin is now

Old history lesson an interview from the 1970s with a reporter skeptical about computers and their potential utility with Ted Nelson.

http://www.cbc.ca/archives/categories/science-technology/computers/inventing-the-internet-age/computers-beyond-computing.html
Audio file

___

Background information

American Ted Nelson, identified here as the president of Computopia, is an internet pioneer with a strange legacy. He was one of the first to envision interlinked online documents, and is credited with inventing the term "hypertext" to describe how computers could access branching, non-linear writing. Hypertext is the basis of the World Wide Web.

. Nelson is infamous for designing a mysterious computer hypertext and multimedia system called Xanadu. He began working on it in 1960 and it has been in continuous development ever since, without ever actually being published. Xanadu was (and for some, still is) an ambitious vision for interconnected electronic documents called "deep hypertext." The key technique envisioned was a sort of "embedding" of content from original sources into a "virtual file," unlike the system of copying and one-way links employed by the World Wide Web.

Found the full clip for context
https://archive.org/details/ideas-maxallen-tednelson
Jump to: