Difference between revisions of "Sandbox S01E02"
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=== Community Memory (Notes for now, I'll make a proper text) === | === Community Memory (Notes for now, I'll make a proper text) === | ||
− | * small pilot network in the San Francisco Bay area, 3 public terminals for common database, ability to add new information, used beyond expectations with great creativity, developed by Resource One Inc. a non-profit corporation and one of few public service computer center, ADD -> new entry + keywords for indexing, FIND -> search keywords (using AND OR NOT), users taught each others how to use the system, used by students + musicians + chess players + car pool organisation + good tips for restaurant + unexpected things like poems, graphics, not uncommon for people using the terminal in groups or hacing to queue for using it, 150 searches + 30 new addition per day | + | * small pilot network in the San Francisco Bay area, 3 public terminals for common database, ability to add new information, used beyond expectations with great creativity, developed by Resource One Inc. a non-profit corporation and one of few public service computer center, ADD -> new entry + keywords for indexing, FIND -> search keywords (using AND OR NOT), users taught each others how to use the system, used by students + musicians + chess players + car pool organisation + good tips for restaurant + unexpected things like poems, graphics, not uncommon for people using the terminal in groups or hacing to queue for using it, 150 searches + 30 new addition per day (Ken Colstad and Efrem Lipkin. 1975. Community memory: a public information network. SIGCAS Comput. Soc. 6, 4 (December 1975), 6-7.) |
− | (Ken Colstad and Efrem Lipkin. 1975. Community memory: a public information network. SIGCAS Comput. Soc. 6, 4 (December 1975), 6-7.) | ||
* (Michael Rossman. 1975. Implications of community memory. SIGCAS Comput. Soc. 6, 4 (December 1975), 7-10.) | * (Michael Rossman. 1975. Implications of community memory. SIGCAS Comput. Soc. 6, 4 (December 1975), 7-10.) | ||
== Rebooting Community Memory == | == Rebooting Community Memory == |
Revision as of 19:05, 13 October 2013
Stories of time sharing
Contents
The logistics of crunching and domination
- Mainframe and general computer design: from ENIAC to von Neumann http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=goi6NAHMKog
- Teletypewriters, post-colonial infrastructures http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBDJXUag3L0 1960s
- Time sharing explained http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q07PhW5sCEk 1963
- Scientific application of time sharing http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sjnmcKVnLi0 1960s
- Time sharing and networks http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cO6asQjQmPM
- Business and education http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aJ6SbvrjxZA 1960s
- Capitalism and logistics, a manly business http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPqloPVnz5w 1978
The nesting of collectivist thinking within cybernetic systems
Demo Unix-like machines
- ssh in several Unix-like systems
- whoaim in mobile Unix-like technology
Community Memory (Notes for now, I'll make a proper text)
- small pilot network in the San Francisco Bay area, 3 public terminals for common database, ability to add new information, used beyond expectations with great creativity, developed by Resource One Inc. a non-profit corporation and one of few public service computer center, ADD -> new entry + keywords for indexing, FIND -> search keywords (using AND OR NOT), users taught each others how to use the system, used by students + musicians + chess players + car pool organisation + good tips for restaurant + unexpected things like poems, graphics, not uncommon for people using the terminal in groups or hacing to queue for using it, 150 searches + 30 new addition per day (Ken Colstad and Efrem Lipkin. 1975. Community memory: a public information network. SIGCAS Comput. Soc. 6, 4 (December 1975), 6-7.)
- (Michael Rossman. 1975. Implications of community memory. SIGCAS Comput. Soc. 6, 4 (December 1975), 7-10.)