[Air-l] A Crystal Ball
Janna Anderson
andersj at elon.edu
Thu Apr 19 06:03:42 PDT 2007
For more on speculation about the future and the internet, see the 2007 Webby Awards Honoree:
http://www.imaginingtheinternet.org
Janna
-----Original Message-----
From: air-l-bounces at listserv.aoir.org on behalf of Ellie Wix
Sent: Wed 4/18/2007 7:34 PM
To: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
Subject: Re: [Air-l] A Crystal Ball
I was recently thinking about this when I stumbled upon
http://www.adultswim.com/shows/athf/movie/indexLb.html (has sound) and I
thought to myself "My children will never understand this". The upcoming
generations will be so used to a smooth flowing internet, both in visual
appearance and usability, that they will look at the web pages we have now
like the way I look at Technicolor movies and ask "This was revolutionary?"
-Ellie
On 4/18/07, James Whyte <whyte.james at yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> I was given a Physics textbook that is 99 years old. In looking at the
> discussion of the electrical potential of gasses, I realized how much the
> science of electricity has changed in the interim. It raises the question
> about the history of the Internet in the post creation era.
> Here are the questions.
>
> 100 years from now what will scholars be writing about the current
> literature and studies? What will the state of science be? What will be
> folklore and what will be the state of formal knowledge? If you comment,
> please speculate as an informed scholar. (on-list or off-list).
>
> James
>
>
> ---------------------------------
> Ahhh...imagining that irresistible "new car" smell?
> Check outnew cars at Yahoo! Autos.
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