Here’s Where Woodstock Meets Silicon Valley
Computers will no longer be a place to hide from girls or zits or lack of social skills, as it was for many of us.
Computers will no longer be a place to hide from girls or zits or lack of social skills, as it was for many of us.
They foresee a “wired world” in which everything from books and movies to doctors’ advice and blueprints are delivered in a blend of words, images and speech on a hand-held device … The future of computing has to move beyond business and into people’s everyday lives. To do that, computers must be not only inexpensive and easier to use, responding to handwritten notes or voice commands, but also linked to faster, cheaper phone lines or by wireless transmission.
It’s not about one-to-many publishing any longer. In the end the digital revolution is coming from the bottom up … We’re living in a period where the future is malleable. We’ve been living in the shadow of nuclear war, the bleak sense of the future was affecting everyone. We’re trying to suggest that the future is friendly. We’re trying to say we can make a difference. Computers and networks are tools that will create better times.
There’s a fundamental shift going on in society right now … the digital revolution is whipping through our lives like a Bengali typhoon [as Louis Rossetto said in Wired’s opening editorial]. It’s not going to go away. We’re profoundly optimistic about how we can use technology to change things. I just don’t think it’s a fad.
Increasingly, we’ll see that type of icon: “We accept Ecash” instead of “We accept American Express” … The implications of this are just enormous.’
The computers and the international networks, Rossetto believes, are media with such powerful messages that in a generation, the world will be a different place. Digitally doomed are mammoth corporations, political parties, the conventional school, the commute to the workplace, orthodox finances including national budgets, and popular entertainment – your television will not screen what broadcasters provide but what its “broadcatchers” (you) choose from vastly diverse multi-media. Even the family will change. “What happens when families come back together because work is done at home?” asks Rossetto. “What neuroses will that expose?”
Continued research in networking and expansion of the research effort into areas more specific to information infrastructure are … essential and should be a federal priority. Research can contribute to architecture, to new concepts for network services, and to new principles and designs in key areas such as security, scale and evolvability. In addition, research can contribute to the lowering of the costs for implementing more general and flexible technologies.
As the Internet is increasingly relied upon to trasmit sensitive information, the security stakes will grow. If scientists cannot be certain that their research data will not be altered, if patients do not trust the privacy of their medical records, and if safety of finacial information is in doubt, then the value of the Internet will be sharply curtailed.
[1994] will be the biggest year in telecommunications history.
The thousands of volumes that are contained today on the shelves of libraries could be trasfered into digital form and … be made available to any place in the country electronically.