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From Cold War to Internet Future

Coming back from Mull we dropped in at the Oysterage at Loch Fyne, drove past the Polaris submarine base on the Holy Loch and then caught the ferry across the Clyde from Dunoon to Gourock. After that I was interested in following up on the history of Holy Loch and in my searches found these film archives on marching against Polaris in the 1960s and the impact on Dunoon of the end of the Holy Loch naval base in the 1990s.

The ferry ride from Dunoon to Gourock was only short, but on one side we left the run-down seaside front where even the Cold War technology of Polaris had moved on, and on the other we caught sight of the enormous Amazon Fulfillment Centre . The impressive building of 300,000 sq ft leaves you with the feeling that you are literally travelling from the technology of the past to that of the future. The dirty technology of nuclear submarines to the nice clean technology of Internet consumerism.  If only it were all that simple.

Gourock turned out to be not quick so fulfilling, and if there is one hotel on this earth I would recommend you NEVER stay it is the Ramada at Gourock.

October 02, 2006 at 11:06 PM in Books, Computers, history, Internet, Technology | Permalink | Comments (0)

ContentLab 2005

PACT's ContentLab 2005 starts tomorrow in Birmingham and if last year is anything to go by it should be a fun event. With a keynote by Hilary Cottam from the Design Museum and sessions on online learning and Ofcom's 'big idea', the Public Service Publisher, it should be set to raise an interesting agenda about the future of interactive content. The most lively session looks likely to be  iRoom 101, where Peter Cowley from Endemol will be placing his most hated interactive content. This will be inspired by my own exhibition on the walls of the conference, looking at 'A Decade of British Interactive Content'. Watch this space for updates.

November 30, 2005 at 10:25 PM in Conference, Curation, Digital Preservation, history, Internet, Technology Museum | Permalink | Comments (0)

Cross-connexions Conference

If you are interested in the History of Telecommunications the Cross-connexions conference at the Science Museum is taking place this weekend. The sessions include some lively papers  on telegraphy, System X, Videotex and the GPO film unit. My own research will be looking at the shifting our understanding of the History of the Internet from its innovation to its use in the home. Delegates can sign up for a day or for the full three days, and there is a conference dinner on Saturday at the top of the BT Tower. I'll be the one clutching the wall and suffering from Vertigo...

November 10, 2005 at 05:00 PM in Conference, history, Internet, Technology | Permalink | Comments (0)

doors 8 revisited


doors8_holi_53
Originally uploaded by ma:kəs.

I've only just seen this review of the Doors 8 conference, but it seems to capture the woodstock of all conferences rather nicely.  Will 'work' ever be such fun again?

June 30, 2005 at 02:14 PM in Conference, India, Inspiration, Internet, Weblogs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Internet history

Yesterday I went to hear Katie Hafner from the NY Times talk at the LSE about the endless paternity debates for the Internet and the role of government funding in innovation. Her book written with her husband was a big influence on me when it came out in 1996, so I was interested to hear where she'd moved on to. It seems shes now interested in - among other things - Digital Preservation, but she still wants to get the facts of the Internet paternity debate right.

Hafner gave a very personal account of her interviews with the 'men of the net' such as J.C.R. Licklider (download his two most important papers here), Larry Roberts, Paul Barran, Donald Davies and Vint Cerf.  She then reitterated Len Kleinrock's hang-up that he doesn't get enough of the credit, but agreed wholeheartedly with Davies' analysis that it was a very liberal interpretation of Kleinrock's dissertation to say it was packet switching, given that it only looked at one node. I must admit I'd always assumed that Donald Davies' paper in 1967 at the ACM Symposium on Operating System Principles was one of the seminal works in the area, and the only true debate was between Davies and Barran. And as they had no problem acknowledging that they'd both tapped into the zeitgeist at the same time, then neither should we.

Later the debate moved on to whether the creation of the Internet is an enditment of capitalism (at this point you can seamlessly interchange 'Internet' with any number of recent inventions - personal computer, computer games..) Why is it that someone at every seminar on the history of technology feels the need to go there, oh these forces for good that could only possibly have come from our own entrepreneurial and democratic structures. What do people think they were doing in the USSR when they created Tetris?!

June 15, 2005 at 11:38 PM in Books, Computers, Digital Preservation, history, Inspiration, Internet, Old Tech, Technology, Web/Tech, Work | Permalink | Comments (0)

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