Sunday, January 24, 2010
As We May Think Response
As we may think was interesting to read because Bush was talking about technology that could have happened but was surpassed by different technology that I don't think Bush could have even fathomed. I was talking about this with one of my friends in a way, we were discussing how our parents aren't very good at texting or using their cell phones and that led to how they probably couldn't have even thought that someday their kids would be using portable phones that they typed on and that there will be technology we couldn't even fathom when our kids are our age. To go along with that Bush talked about how cameras, film, and the Memex would be smaller and more organized. To think that a computer could be as small as a desk was a big step back in 1945 when computers were the size of a house. Cameras were talked about being as small as a walnut that was worn on the forehead and the photographer would sqeeze a wire to take a picture on film. Cameras that are film I'm not sure got to be as small as the size of a walnut as technology switched from film work and technology to digital. Digital made almost everything automatic. Focus was made automatic, film automatically advanced and developing pictures stepped out of the dark room. Bush has one line that I found really interesting in relation to cameras because it is part of technology today, "Often it would be advantageous to be able to snap the camera and to look at the picture immediately" (2.) Bush talked about things that happened and some that didn't because that technology simply wasn't developed. Bush talked about compression as very important when talking about cost for things. Using new technology large objects could be scaled down and that would reduce costs largely. Bush also talked about how technology would function more like a human does, which is the basis of many computer programs today and especially the internet.
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