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#21
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Oops! It sounds like my main man has been inhaling his bubble pipe again...
Bob .................................................. .................................................. ........... "Joe Haubenreich" wrote in message . .. "Calif Bill" wrote in message ink.net... "Was Arpa net and Darpa net. I was on Arpa Net in about 1981 range. We were fed from Stanford, I think, via another company near us in Milpitas, Ca. We had sold our Building to Xerox when they bought Shugart Associates as we were between Building 4 and 5 in Sunnyvale. Dang I is old." ---------------------- Nah, Bill... you aren't that old. In fact, you're still a cub. Usenet, Rime-Net, Hair-Net.... they're all light years ahead of what we had when I entered the workforce -- scratching crude pictures and symbols on boulders and rolling them from cube to cube! "Rock-n-roll" was fast, cheap, and required little OJT. For short notes, a fist-size rock would do. My head still throbs in memory of all the jokes and chain-rocks that whizzed around our community. Of course, rock-n-roll found its way from the office to society in general, and then parents were faced with the challenge of figuring out the rock symbols their teenagers devised and used among themselves. (There was no respect for convention even back in the day.) Once a technology has become entrenched, troglodytes will hold onto to it forever. As I visit the major cities of the U.S., I'm pleased to note that the denizens still adhere to the old ways, as evidenced by bricks whizzing through the air at political rallies and large, flamboyant messages posted on brick walls, alleyways, bridge pilings, stationary boxcars, subway tunnels... almost any highly-visible, vertical surface invites correspondence. Boy, what excitement filled the place when someone introduced the technique of using a stylus to press cuneiform patterns pressed into moist clay tablets. Very neat, but talk about slow! We had to let them cure before we could send over to the other cubes in our office or to other cave complexes. And, as we later learned, every technological advance in communications created a buracracy and new jobs. Cuneiform writing wasn't easy (it took a while to learn to speak Phoenecian and the Ugarit alphabet), so every complex ended up with a HRD department for training the workers. Then we had to develop specialist for archiving. If someone sent you a note and you wanted to refer to it later, all you had to do was run down to the stacks, where all the notes were categorized by subject, or by sent date, or by last update, or by author, or by recipient. (We seem to have not advanced to far on that evolutionary path, have we?) As I progressed in my career, we witnessed communication fads come and go. Smoke signals were pretty cool, and you could send them over long distance (much easier than rocks!) but when health-nicks caught wind of the risks involved, they instituted "no smoking in public places" policies, which damped that technological advance. Pounding on hollow logs and later skin-covered drums was neat at first. All the nerds who knew how to drum were snapped up by companies and drumming became "cool," but as that more and more people jumped into the act and that technology proliferated, the airwaves became cluttered. We were always having our messages intercepted, and too many people online simultaneously clogged the network. The feds put the kibosh on that with HIPPA, since it's hard to maintain confidentiality in the open forum of drum messaging. Fads came and went... papyrus, parchment, paper... then along came Guglielmo Marconi, Claude Chappe and Samuel Morse, Alexander Graham Bell, John Logie Baird, and all those braniacs who ushered in the paperless workplaces that we all enjoy today. Al Gore added structure and elegance to electronic communications when he and Ali McGraw (or was it Tipper), invented the Internet. And that's where we find ourselves today. Don't get too settled on this "Internet" thing. I'm sure it's just a passing fad, and soon we'll all be abuzz with "simul-thought-casting" or something else. Joe |
#22
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![]() "Joe Haubenreich" wrote in message Don't get too settled on this "Internet" thing. I'm sure it's just a passing fad, and soon we'll all be abuzz with "simul-thought-casting" or something else. Old news.... Pyschic Network That 800 number is here somewhere. |
#23
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"bill allemann" wrote in message
. .. "Joe Haubenreich" wrote in message Don't get too settled on this "Internet" thing. I'm sure it's just a passing fad, and soon we'll all be abuzz with "simul-thought-casting" or something else. Old news.... Pyschic Network That 800 number is here somewhere. --------------------------- I knew you were going to write that, Bill. Joe |
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