Computer Overkill?
DOI: 10.1063/1.4796230
Cheers for Richard Hammond, who challenges the visionary image of a brave new world run by Internet and computer “culture” (see Physics Today, February 2001, page 14
In that same article, we read of the nightmare vision of a “smart house” in which everything is done by computers, “from adjusting lighting, temperature, and music to transmitting the blood pressure and weight of the house’s occupants to a medical clinic.” George Orwell’s apocalyptic vision 1984 was a nursery story compared with such a horror— which, unfortunately, is in our grasp.
About nine years ago, I wrote some memoirs, and “saved” them on then-current computer diskettes. Recently a publisher showed interest in the text, but told me that current computers cannot use the old normal-density diskettes. So, with some expense and trouble, I had the text transferred to a single high-density disk. But as it turned out, it was all no use, because the word-processing software, at the time the best available, is now completely obsolete! Funny, not long ago one could read without much trouble Egyptian, Sanskrit, and Aramaic texts that were several thousand years old. Now, we can’t even read something nine years old. Where are we heading?
More about the Authors
Paul Roman. Ludenhausen, Germany .