Kort om foredraget:
The computer world pretends to be finished, but never will be. In fact it simulates the past: computers for secretaries, as designed by Xerox in the 1970s, have become our working world. Today's "computer documents" (.doc and .pdf) simulate paper and the fancy printing of long ago. The Web added trivial one-way jumps, allowing pogo-stick travel between pages. But what of deeper connection?
We need deep, live documents of a very different kind for the interactive screen, as foreseen by Bush and Engelbart and others-- for annotation and detailed discussion and scholarship, for organizing and decision-making, for lawmaking and litigation, and for entirely new forms of writing. Such profusely connected, living documents are still possible, but require a wholly different infrastructure. We will show some of these alternatives.
Oppsummering skrevet av Sverre Holm:
Ted Nelson startet med sin egen versjon av world wide webs historie, fra parallelle tekster p? Rosettasteinen, via Vannevar Bush’ memex i 1945, sin egen hypertekst-visjon fra 1960 og fram til og med Mosaic nettleseren i 1992.
Ted Nelson er god p? one-liners og her er noen fra foredraget:
- Det ? lage brukerinterface, interaktiv design, ligner mest av alt p? det ? skape en film. Det handler i begge tilfeller om “Events on the screen that interact with the heart and mind of the viewer.”
- Derfor er det mer ? l?re av Disney enn av Microsoft.
- Det brukerinterfacet vi har i dag, enten det er under Windows eller Mac, er ikke det ultimate GUI (Graphical User Interface), det er bare én versjon som heller burde hete PUI (Parc Xerox UI).
- WYSIWYG er et propagandauttrykk som bare g?r ut p? ? simulere papir, det ble jo skapt av Xerox som var i printerbransjen. WYSIWYNC er et bedre uttrykk: What You See Is What You Never Could.
Gisle Hannemyr har mer detaljer i sitt gode referat p? sin blogg. Dessuten var Ted Nelsons egen beskrivelse av foredraget slik:
The computer world pretends to be finished, but never will be. In fact it simulates the past: computers for secretaries, as designed by Xerox in the 1970s, have become our working world. Today’s “computer documents” (.doc and .pdf) simulate paper and the fancy printing of long ago. The Web added trivial one-way jumps, allowing pogo-stick travel between pages. But what of deeper connection?
We need deep, live documents of a very different kind for the interactive screen, as foreseen by Bush and Engelbart and others– for annotation and detailed discussion and scholarship, for organizing and decision-making, for lawmaking and litigation, and for entirely new forms of writing. Such profusely connected, living documents are still possible, but require a wholly different infrastructure. We will show some of these alternatives.
Mer om Ted Holm Nelson og hans norske vaner finner dere p? Wikipedia.
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