santosh maharshi passes along an article on Edge by David Gelernter,
the man who (according to the introduction) predicted the Web and first
described cloud computing; he's also a Unabomber survivor. Gelernter
makes 35 predictions and assertions, some brilliant, some dubious. "6.
We know that the Internet creates 'information overload,' a problem
with two parts: increasing number of information sources and increasing
information flow per source. The first part is harder: it's more
difficult to understand five people speaking simultaneously than one
person talking fast — especially if you can tell the one person to stop
temporarily, or go back and repeat. Integrating multiple information
sources is crucial to solving information overload. Blogs and other
anthology-sites integrate information from many sources. But we won't
be able to solve the overload problem until each Internet user can
choose for himself what sources to integrate, and can add to this mix
the most important source of all: his own personal information — his
email and other messages, reminders and documents of all sorts. To
accomplish this, we merely need to turn the whole Cybersphere on its
side, so that time instead of space is the main axis. ... 14. The
structure called a cyberstream or lifestream is better suited to the
Internet than a conventional website because it shows
information-in-motion, a rushing flow of fresh information instead of a
stagnant pool."
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