Umberto Eco on Paper vs. Electronic Memory 290
joabj writes "Paper was itself a technology at one point, this essay
from Umberto Eco, author of "In The Name of the Rose," reminds us. Eco holds forth on the differences between paper and electronic memory. He doesn't come out in favor of either, rather he talks about the advantages each has, in technical terms. Some fascinating ideas here...."
Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:5, Insightful)
Paper is better than electronic for long term storage. There are already concerns for data being lost forever because of incompatible older formats and hardware. Paper was good enough for da Vinci.
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2)
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:5, Interesting)
The best estimate is that at least 75% of Leonardo's writings have been destroyed or lost since his lifetime. Most of the surviving codices are actually rebindings of his work which have been salvaged from elsewhere.
Then there is the problem that Leonardo hardly ever finished anything - he loved procrastinating work, so its hard to know if some works attributed to his pupils are actually overpaintings of Leonardo's work. he hardly ever signed anything, so a good number of paintings (and some sculptures) are suspected of being Leonardo's work, but it can't be proven.
And he kept experimenting - most famously in the case of The Last Supper [upenn.edu] in Milan. Leonardo wanted to paint with oils for their intense colouration, but did not want to use the traditional fresco technique of applying paint to wet plaster (Leonardo rarely worked for a long period of time - so the plaster would have dried before he completed the work).
So he invented an oil-based paint that could be applied to dried plaster. And it looked magnificent - contemporaries were in awe of the work - for a few years, but Leonardo's formulation did not bind to the plaster and the paint began to crumble from the plaster. The painting was then restored a number of times - quite crudely, which made a big difference to the work.
So if you are in Milan, go and see The Last Supper - it is a work of extraordinary beauty and power (and size), but it is a faint shadow of the original.
Leonardo also lost a lot of work thanks to his choice of patrons, most notably Ludovico Sforza [wikipedia.org], tyrant of Milan between 1480 and 1499. Ludovico hired Leonardo ostensibly to create a massive 8m high statue of a horse to commemorate Frederico Sforza, the dynasty's founder.
Well Leonardo being Leonardo, he didn't work terribly quickly and got side-tracked, spending much of his time producing the majority of his known paintings, designing fortifications for Milan, a giant crossbow and starting his obsession with geology.
In 1499, the French invaded Lombardy to settle their claim for the dukedom of Milan. Sforza lost the battle and fled - Leonardo took his opportunity to leave as well.
What he didn't take was the full-sized model of his horse. The clay model was destroyed by Gascon bowmen and reduced to rubble. In recent years, an American team [leonardoshorse.org] have created a pair of monumental bronze horses inspired by the original. One is in Michigan, the other in Milan - I saw the latter one this summer - and in a word - WOW!
And just think, this is Leonardo da Vinci we are talking about, what has been lost from less-well-known artists? What about the collected works of the Library of Alexandria, the libraries of the Caliphate of Baghdad, Rome...?
Best wishes,
Mike.
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:5, Insightful)
As for incompatible older formats - is that like old languages which are hard to decipher? As mankind progresses extracting data from old electronic formats will be similar to extracting it from squiggles on stone pillars.
Archives and Comtemplation (Score:4, Insightful)
I really don't fall for the lost data due to file incompatibility issue. The last 50 years has recorded more information than any other corresponding period. Our biggest problem right now is information overload. We are recording more information than future generations can or will ever want to process. In this regards the electronic archives might prove more valuable as they can be processed by historians in a faster manner than paper.
I found this quote from the article interesting. By being slashdotted, thousands of people are reading Eco at the moment. The slashdotters are actively engaged in trying to think of something clever to say for mod points. The blanket statement that people reflect when reading books, and don't with the net isn't quite true. People are engaged a little bit differently.
Re:Archives and Comtemplation (Score:3, Insightful)
My old Amstrad PC1512 can read and write 5 1/4" floppies, but I don't even know if it works any more. 3 1/2" floppies will die a death soon enough, and the CD...? Who knows. In fifty years time even your latest super duper spanky-wank data storage medium might just be a lump of worthless crud.
Looking at file incompatabilty you might want to think about space mission tapes that can't be read because no-one's alive who know the decoding/reading system. Lots
Re:Archives and Comtemplation (Score:2)
The problems we will have with electronic media probably will have more to do with reinterpretation during the transfer. These same problems occurred with monks transcribing works. First they chose which works to keep and which
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, from what I've read of Eco he would consider that one of paper's chief advantages. When preserving information is more difficult, you only record things worth recording, rather than the pointless dataglutting that we do today.
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2)
"Why should we care about the common man, we only want to record the *important* events".
You never know what's important data 50 or 100 years down the road.
Having it both ways (Score:2)
1. It is easier to store data on, and
2. It is harder to store data on
I suspect some people just like paper, and make up reasons as they go along...
One way to use the higher storage capacity of digital storage would be to store stuff in thousands of different places, different media, formats etc. Some may be lost, become unreadable etc, but hardly every single copy. And it would still just take 1/1000 of the space of paper copies.
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2)
Eugh.
Tom.
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2, Insightful)
Printing out e-mails is good (Score:3, Interesting)
You actually trust electronic media to store stuff that may be crucial if you ever end up in court? I've lost dozens of important e-mails because a) I've deleted them accidentally because I thought they were spam, b) the company server had a total meltdown and the backup policy does not include e-mail that's more than a year old and c) the backup cd-r disc had turned unreadable while stored in its jewel box in a dark drawer.
You don't print out your e-mails? Eugh.
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't want to think about how you propose cataloging all the paper data you want kept.
Or about the way you'd ensure the data's backed up.
Or about how you would propagate a change through your enormous cross-indexed mirrored filing cabinets.
Yes, long term storage of electronic data could be a problem, but this is why you review your data storage methods periodically, and ensure you aren't using hard/software that won't be readable in five/ten/fifty years time.
I know that paper certainly
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:4, Insightful)
Librarians solved that problem hundreds of years ago.
Or about the way you'd ensure the data's backed up.
Just like anything else, another copy.
Or about how you would propagate a change through your enormous cross-indexed mirrored filing cabinets.
I am sure that removing an index card isn't that hard.
Yes, long term storage of electronic data could be a problem
Not "could be". It is a problem. It's a problem because the technology is so new people don't know what works, and what doesn't.
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2)
Tom.
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2)
If you want something to survive for a long time, it seems to me that the best strategy is to make as many copies as possible, in as many formats as possible. Unfortunately with money, copies aren't often as useful as the original, and can
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2)
though, when you archive for paper you should keep in mind to archive it in a way that doesn't self destruct.
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:5, Interesting)
From the publisher:
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2)
(And how do the woodchucks figure into this?)
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:3, Interesting)
I always thought that proprietary formats were going to be trouble, so I always kept a copy of my stuff in plaintext. Lotus 123 was exported to CSV. Wordperfect 5.1 exported to plaintext, etc.
This stuff is still usable. I recently dug back into some analysis I did in 1991 for a CICS system and pulled out an outline and some paragraphs that kind of suited the J2EE proje
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2, Interesting)
As computers evolve, even non-proprietary formats become problematic. If the underlying tech changes (for instance, the number of bits per character is increased) all the old data must be converted to the new standard to ensure that newer machines can use it. But, if the amount of new data produced increases (due to population growth, etc), the amount of existing data grows exponentially, and it becomes impract
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:4, Interesting)
That's arguably true provided you have a printing press. Anyone who's studied medieval and classical literature knows that paper is a horrible medium when data has to be copied manually -- most things written more than a thousand years ago don't exist today, either through war, disaster, or lack of interest, and those that do survive, have been bowdlerized.
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2)
Re:Paper Electronics (for many things anyhow) (Score:2)
And carved stone is even better. I would suggest using a CNC milling machine to backup any data you want to keep for longer than paper allows, but I guess punchcards are probably just as good.
Could be worse I suppose. We could have translated the Rosetta stone to discover it reads: "Content-type: text/DRM-Encrypted\n Note: this material is copyrighted, please purchase an egyptian slave to allow you to legally read it"
Each to it's own (Score:5, Insightful)
Many years ago, I was doing a school report on Fidel Castro's revolutionary activities. My mother had an encyclopedia that had been bought in 1959 -- Just about the time that Castro was starting his second (and successful) revolution. The Encyclopedia Brittanica had about one paragraph on him -- describing him as little more than a failed revolutionary.
For me, this historical view of Castro (the view itself being of historical nature) was rather interesting... and unlikely to have been repeated in later versions of the encyclopedia. Today, even the teaser for the Fidel Castro's entry [britannica.com] in the encyclopedia is as long as the entire original
. I'm very glad that my mother bought the original Encyclopedia, and that my sister has seen fit to keep it. I would also encourag anybody who has such old works to keep them as historical record, much less likely to change than the 'net.
For Umberto's third record form -- organic memory -- I live in BC, which still has a reasonably active Native culture. There are still a small handful of people in BC who grew up trained almost exclusively in the pre-european style of the various nations that are now British Columbia. The Native tradition is very much an oral one, and they had methods and customs designed to keep such histories constant over time... Present day researchers were surprised to find that centuries after first contact in the far north, the native oral histories of the episodes were pretty much in agreement with the written logs of the explorers of that time.
I remember one native elder recalling how his (then) elder scoffed at the european tradition of writing everything down...
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
read the article, buster (Score:5, Insightful)
It's clear from all the posts so far that I'm the only person to actually read the article.
Eco is not interested in the physical difference between paper and electronic media. He doesn't discuss problems of compatibility or the possibilities of electronic paper. His article is about the evolution of *what* we write, not how we write it.
The way in which the online world frees us from the single author, linear narratives of books and opens the door to multifaceted collaborative efforts (he doesn't mention wikis, but he seems to have got the idea). He thinks about what effect this will have on authorship and envisages the process as being akin to a jazz riff, slightly different every time depending on what the participants bring to it, rather than the single vision of an auteur.
It is indeed an insightful and thought provoking article by one of the world's leading philosophers. And frankly, it's not something you can even begin to comment on until you read it. Which makes me wonder how it got onto
Re:read the article, buster (Score:2, Insightful)
We get obsessed with the technology that's changing how we do things and then we completely ignore the effects of that technology until we are well into the change. IMHO, that's because we're always trying to get new technology to do the same old things "faster" and "easier". It's usually the iconoclasts/rebels/weirdos/(your favourite label here) who are the first to point out that the new tech can do things we've never thought of.
I wouldn't presume to reduce Eco's complex dis
Re:read the article, buster (Score:5, Insightful)
Jazz is lovely for some entertainment, but is a poor substitute for fate and destiny, which we project onto the libraries of printed matter in ways that we cannot project onto the Internet, precisely because on the Internet, we create the content, even if not in the HTML, in the hyper-reading. Wherever I am the author (and every hyper-reader in some sense becomes his own author), fate and destiny have been killed by my own will.
In some cases (i.e. the encyclopedic search), this is helpful. In others (i.e. meaning making, metaphysics, the desire for a collective memory) it is not.
Interesting.
Strange (Score:2)
advanttages and disadvantages (Score:4, Insightful)
Try the same with a HD and see how much damage it can take. On the other hand electronic data can be copied ad infinitum.
Re:advanttages and disadvantages (Score:4, Funny)
Re:advanttages and disadvantages (Score:2)
Hugo the Seer (Score:3, Interesting)
Hugo forsaw porn, spam, cults, and Slashdot!!!
I hope you have an enjoyable Thanskgiving.
And don't forget the alphabet (Score:5, Interesting)
Paper, the way we describe our world, the way we describe ourselves... the impact on the way we think can be enormous.
As for "technology", everything we make has been radical new technology at some point. People are so impressed that chip prices fall every 18 months. But this applies to all technological products when you're climbing the S curve.
Re:And don't forget the alphabet (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:And don't forget the alphabet (Score:4, Insightful)
Why is that to the detriment of our worldview? Abstraction from physical objects has allowed us to develop things like abstract mathematics and music. Beside, the much-maligned western worldview has led to the most stunningly successful civilization anywhere, anywhen. Sure there are problems (environmental, societal, economic, political, spiritual) and things we could improve; but now we have the material security and scientific knowledge to begin dealing with those issues, and what is to say that any other civilization would be any better at dealing with these issues, anyway?. The adored Chinese worldview appears to have produced a stagnant behemoth unable to compete with modernity, nor provide the standard of living to the masses that we all take for granted. In addition, ancient China referred to itself as the 'middle kingdom', i.e. the center of the world (which is partly why it failed to keep up). That's pretty self-centered in my book.
Finally, it is the development of modern science (in partciular astronomy) that has fundamentially changed our view of the Universe; we now know that we are but a small planet orbiting an average star in an average Galaxy etc etc. That's pretty humbling, and entirely the fruit of western thought.
People who confuse current problems with fundamental limitations, and who over-romanticise primitive cultures (while enjoying all the fruits of modern life) really, really irritate me.
Re:And don't forget the alphabet (Score:2)
No-one is romanticising a particular culture. John Gray's argument (which I quite like, even if it's not 100% my own opinion) is this: western thought has been driven by a human-centered world view since the time of Plato. This world view has, indeed, been the basis for modern western life, but also the basis for seriously aggressive religions and many social problems.
The argument continues: the idea that humans are "special" leads to the myth of human perf
Re:And don't forget the alphabet (Score:2)
Of course violence is a human universal. That's not news, and I did not argue the opposite. What I said was this: there is a theory that the latin alphabet has been the cause of a particularly human-centric school of thought that appears obvious to us but is not universal.
Re:And don't forget the alphabet (Score:3, Interesting)
And the Chinese don't have abstract mathematics or music? As in, what's the relevance to the abstraction you're talking about?
Potentially
Re:And don't forget the alphabet (Score:2)
Oh, yeah, I love my commas.
please correct title of Umberto Eco's book (Score:4, Informative)
Re:please correct title of Umberto Eco's book (Score:3, Informative)
We are almost there - the title is "The Name of the Rose" :) Fun book, too.
Re:please correct title of Umberto Eco's book (Score:2)
The name of the rose of past times is just a name, but only names remain amongst us.
Daniel
Re:please correct title of Umberto Eco's book (Score:2)
More interestingly... (Score:3, Informative)
Domesday (Score:5, Interesting)
A thousand years ago (more or less) the Domesday book recorded a snapshot of life in England (and Wales I think
20 (or so) years ago, the domesday project did the same thing - recorded to a laserdisk, and intended to be a resource of all things at that time. For the time, it was pretty fantastic - schools up and down the country took part, videos were made, maps, testaments from people of all walks of life.
There is now a project [umich.edu] to try and resurrect the domesday project, because no technology available can read it. The book (though written in latin) is still perfectly legible. Which is the better technology ?
Paper every time, apart from when you're searching
Simon.
Re:Domesday (Score:2, Funny)
There is now a project to try and resurrect the domesday project, because no technology available can read it.
The problem is, it wasn't a videogame. If they'd included a few side-scrolling shooters, there'd be
Re:Domesday (Score:2)
Imagine if the library of Alexandria had been "backed up" to another site somewhere else in the world.
Or to bring it closer to home, a friend of mine recently had a house fire. He now only has photographs of his life dating from about 1999 onwards, when he first bought a digital camera.
I suspect the Domesday book either isn't quite as important to people as Slashdotters try to make it out to be, or they chose a really stupid format to put it in. What, did the reading equipment suddenly jus
Re:Domesday (Score:2)
The library at Alexandria was unique throughout the world; no matter what medium was used to store the data, if the container is destroyed (with significant prejudice, in this instance), the data will be lost.
The issue here was that the hardware was specific, expensive, and tied to a platform that died. Suddenly people realised they couldn't get to the data any more.
Sure, the project has little bearing on your life or mine, but it's s
Re:Domesday (Score:2)
Hmm... I'll have to dig out my BBC Model B and see if it still works reliably. Could have saved them a bit of trouble ;-)
(FWIW, it was covered here [slashdot.org] about a year ago.)
Re:Domesday (Score:2)
Everybody may have different requirements in mind when working on a project such as the modern domesday.
If the requirements were "get me lots of temporary fame and grant money for this fancy high-tech project" - I'd say laserdisk was the "better" technology.
If the requirement was "to produce something that would be more likely to be read by our progeny 1000 years hence", of course, it didn't work out.
Always think of the requirements. "Better" is a pretty vague description.
Re:Domesday (Score:2)
I don't see the failure of the modern-day domesday project so much as a result of some fundamental flaw in every storage medium other than paper, but merely the consequence of a flawed approach to electronic storage.
That the modern domesday records are useless to anybody without access to a laserdisc reader is analogous to the fact that the original Domesday book is useless to anybody who cannot read Latin. We can read the original Domesday book because Latin is a standardized and widely-understood langua
Re:Domesday (Score:2)
I stand by the claim that 1000 years (and counting) is better than 20 (and out).
Simon.
Re:Domesday (Score:3, Informative)
Where also sits an x86 computer running Windows that has a fully operational version of the BBC Digital Domesday Book since June 2003. It took about 3 years to retrieve the data and write an emulator that could run the software, which originally ran on the BBC Micro computer, but they did it. [umich.edu]
Re:Domesday (Score:3)
The IBM PC was nowhere to be seen, the Amiga was a dream in some designers head, the Mac hadn't been released over here. It's not the disk-designers fault that the best solutions at the time later failed to make a mark... As for BCPL, it was the precursor to 'C' (you've heard of 'C', I take it?)
So, basically, learn some history before you post complete crap.
Simon.
Required reading (Score:5, Insightful)
If you can't get through this article and get something from it, you shouldn't be in the debate.
Required reading (Score:4, Informative)
double plus good scrotch.
even if you dont' manage the whole article, just this paragraph is worth reading:
"Yet, there is a difference between implementing the activity of producing infinite and unlimited texts and the existence of already produced texts, which can perhaps be interpreted in infinite ways but are physically limited. In our same contemporary culture we accept and evaluate, according to different standards, both a new performance of Beethoven's Fifth and a new Jam Session on the Basin Street theme. In this sense, I do not see how the fascinating game of producing collective, infinite stories through the Net can deprive us of authorial literature and art in general. Rather, we are marching towards a more liberated society in which free creativity will coexist with the interpretation of already written texts. I like this. But we cannot say that we have substituted an old thing with a new one. We have both."
Required reading (Score:5, Insightful)
I think it is crap.
It is unclear and confusing.
Some people have this idea that to be smart profound or insightful you need to obscure what you are saying.
I think the real challenge is to say it in such a way that people can understand you. The more clearly you can state a complex idea, the better the author.
Required reading should be clear and understood by all. It should be easy to read. We shouldn't discount people simply because they can't understand some random rambling rant.
(Can you tell I didn't like the article?)
Think "source code" (Score:2)
Re:Required reading (Score:3, Insightful)
Your guidelines are good for practical communication like business or debate. But sometimes it's ok to ask the reader to think between words.
Re:Required reading (Score:2)
Then for a slashdot discussion it is inappropriate to suggest this as required reading.
long-winded, but some interesting points... (Score:3, Interesting)
"People ask me all the time if digital technology means the end of books."
"It doesn't mean the end of physical books, because the computer I just spent 12 hours reading hurts my eyes, and eBooks haven't been a success in the marketplace; never mind that it took 20 years for the engineers of cellular phones to come up with the technology and design necessary to put one in every pocket -- digital readers will never be any good because today's suck."
"It doesn't mean the end of the book as a narrative or storytelling device either, because the nature of hypertext is wholly different from linear writing. Hypertext will supplement books and fiction as another form of expression, not replace it."
I hate it when academics write about engineering problems. His points about hypertext (mostly in the last third of the essay) make RTFA worthwhile, though.
Re:long-winded, but some interesting points... (Score:2)
Devil is in the details. (Score:2)
Sure you can, you'd just be wrong. (you forgot that detail)
--
This post is why engineers shouldn't have lunch breaks.
Books and Further Thinking (Score:4, Insightful)
The article is interesting, but I cringed when I saw this point:
First of all, we know that books are not ways of making somebody else think in our place; on the contrary, they are machines that provoke further thoughts.
Ideally this is true, and it's the expected opinion of Eco, who makes his living off of the written word. In reality, though, books often do little to promote further thinking. I need only think back to my time as a TA, when many students wouldn't understand how to solve a particular problem because they couldn't simply look it up in a textbook. Even when a solution was there for them to find, most would simply duplicate the answer without understanding the thought-process behind it. Even today, a significant portion of co-workers wouldn't try to figure out a non-trivial problem because they feel as if it's a waste of time, and surely there's already an answer written up somewhere for them to find. The new human nature, I guess.
While this has more to do with information itself than with the benefits of paper vs. electronic memory, the mere fact that so much information is recorded on one form or another has significantly altered the mind-set of today's generation. A great number of us really are allowing others to think for us. While Eco rightly suggests that books are limited in their abilities, namely they can only record and not compute, I feel that they often promote less thinking.
Re:Books and Further Thinking (Score:2)
You and a lot of educated people back when the printing press was invented.
Before this, most information was passed down verbally, and people couldn't just "look up" an answer to a problem - they had to figure it out for themselves. 15/16th century academics often worried that mass availability of printed material would stop people from thinking for themselves, because all the answers were available on paper.
I've heard of schools fighting against textbooks eve
Re:Books and Further Thinking (Score:2)
Hm... (Score:4, Funny)
extended criticism... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not going to touch point b, which is an investigation of "hypertext" and multimedia, and most of his observations are pretty interesting. As an academic and a philosopher, he's good at thinking about ideas. However, his opinions on the possibilities of eBooks (which, unfortunately, most literature-industry types will take seriously) are misguided.
The only evidence he offers for this "incapability" is that they make his eyes hurt. What kind of "computer console"? This is really important!
A radiation tube? I hope he had a pair of Clockwork Orange lackeys nearby to administer eyedrops. A desktop LCD? Better on the eyes, but still bad on the back. A laptop is OK, but it pretty much has to stay on the stomach. A tablet PC is even better still, but still to unweildy.
(and don't get me started on "eBook readers," btw... nobody ever suggested that you should carry a separate PDA for an address book, and another for a calendar, and another for a to-do list; dedicated ebook readers are clearly insane and should be disregarded. That Eco doesn't dismiss them outright shows how little he understands gadgetry and human interface engineering.)
But what about PDAs? Simple, unassuming backlit LCDs? Granted, they're mostly too small for truly comfortable reading (I think there's a huge, untapped market for a PDA the size of a "trade paperback"), but they're damned close.
I've read many novels and stories on PDAs (and even one short novel on my cellphone); after reading the Harry Potter books on their Palm handhelds, my sister and her husband now gripe when something they'd like to read can't be found in an "eBook" format. The husband refuses to touch Stevenson's Quicksilver until he can download it, like he did with a bootleg copy of Cryptonomicon.
When the cellular phones were invented in the 1980s and failed to become widely successful in the marketplace, the engineers did not decide that their idea was a poor one and give up. They recognized that their implementation was flawed, and went back to the "drawing board" (or their MS-DOS-driven copies of Autocad, and I'm sure there's a point to be made there someplace).
Eco just glossed over the answer. "ebooks" (what a horrible term) will never render all books extinct. They will supplement books.
You know those boxes that photocopier paper come in? I have 25 of those, stuffed full of books. Each box is damned heavy. As you might guess, I'm one of those people who loves books.
Many of them -- autographed ones, first editions, books with sentimental value -- I would never give up. But I don't want to (or intend to) part with any of them (I reread nearly all of them). What I'd like is to put 85% of them onto digital media. I just don't need hardcopies of murder mysteries, or pulp sci-fi. Even some of the really good stuff, the Camus and Nabakov and Faulkner, I just don't need to haul around these paperbacks for the rest of my life.
Modern literature is usually published in two phases, an expensive hardback, and then a consumer paperback. When I'd like to see is the later phase supplemented with digital copies. Nobody who's a fan of these suggests a "death of the book." No way. Just a death of some of them, and in the process, making them cheaper and more ubiquitous.
Best Argument in Favor of Electronic (Score:5, Funny)
Great men, stupid errors (Score:2)
Plato was writing
Plato died ca. 347 BC, Victor Hugo wrote in the 19th century, so it's 22 not 14.
Take that as a cautonary note for next time you feel smart: you're just one neuronal glitch away from stupidity...
Reading: on screen, paper, clay (Score:4, Informative)
I'm sure that paper vs. clay arguments raged in the early days of paper. Paper was flimsy, flammable, and cheap. Clay was solid, serene, and worthy of keeping. A similar set of arguments now embroils the screen vs. paper debate.
In a few decades, I'd bet that most people will consider paper an anachronism -- hardcopy being too inflexible, bulky, and expensive to use in everyday life. Better screens and from-birth exposure to the advantages of virtual access will lower people's nostalgia for and use of paper. Paper will never go away (after all, we still carve stone tablets) but paper will be marginalized. The percentage of content read on the screen will only increase.
Aha! He knows what "hacker" means: (Score:2)
Nice change to see somebody outside the nerd world using the word correctly. Anybody here prepared to admit to being 'unused to browsing books'? :-)
Al Ahram Weekly (Score:2)
Nice newspaper, but not one I expected to find on Slashdot's main page!!! That's a fun coincidence!
(and no I didn't submit the article)
Paper vs. Plastic (Score:2)
I'll also admit that my Palm has been a good companion on long, tedious business trips; a book housed on a PDA means one less item to be lugged through airports.
Anne
Something bugs me... (Score:2)
Sure, they are made of vaguely similar materials, but are vastly different... Stone tablets resemble paper scrolls more than computer chips... and computer chips resemble a biological brain more than anything else.
Re:Something bugs me... (Score:2)
If you can, attribute that first set of 'weird' stuff to Literature, and concentrate on the meat of the essay later on.
Anyone else reminded of _The_Diamond_Age_? (Score:2, Interesting)
Admittedly, at the beginning of the story, the book is more of a video monitor, with moving pictures and sounds and such, but by the end, when she's matured, it's mainly text.
What sort of future can _that_ have?
(P.S. --- a holdover from the "old days"; how many times do
Peculiar Use of the Word "Technology" (Score:2)
And it stopped being a technology when?
Some years ago (Score:3, Interesting)
Now to be honest, I did find myself scratching my head on occasion trying to fashion a novel come-back to counter such objections, or provide an analogy by way of example but came up with little. Several months passed and I sat down one evening to read the new issue of Harper's Magazine and came across an article on Umberto Eco. I don't remember much about the article, except that it was well written, interesting, and concerned itself with (what else?) Umberto Eco. What I do remember, however, was the way in which Mr. Eco characterised himself as having no use for email and expressing a strong dislike of telephones. He advised anyone who was inclined to contact him to send a hand written note or letter addressed simply c/o the University of Bologna, the idea being that "it would eventually find its way" to him in due time.
Reading his words made me laugh (the funniest jokes are always the most personal, it seems) and I realized that even if I didn't live in southern Italy, my refusal to use an answering machine was perfectly justified. If Umberto Eco didn't answer his telephone, I didn't need to either. It was everyone else that had the problem. And if someone really really needed to contact me, they could similarly write a letter.
Things change for all of us, it seems.
--
value_added
e-mail, cell, pager and ICQ numbers available on request
Umberto Eco (Score:2)
Interestingly enough, that's how I felt about some of his books. =) It may have just been that I was too young to fully understand/appreciate what I was reading.
Name of the Rose, when I did read it later, was quite good--see the movie with Sean Connery!--but I never managed to wrap my brain around Foucault's Pe
Re:RTFA? (Score:2)
The name of the rose is good, though. But the film is better.
Re:RTFA? (Score:2)
Re:RTFA? (Score:2)
I have just done that, no problem, great read. How would you like the article presented to you? With big letters and big, bright, shiny pictures? Yep, Mom probably tells better stories than this old man. But when you'll grow up, maybe you'll understand him.
Re:RTFA? (Score:2)
Re:the english version?! (Score:2)
"Let me speak for the sake of simplicity of vegetal memory in order to designate books" could quite easily have read "For the sake of simplicity let us assume that books are made from paper" or something.
Re:the english version?! (Score:2)
IMHO, he is long winded and writes complicated on purpose. If he wrote without using obscure phraseology then his texts would be much shorter and easier to understand. He doesn't want to be understood easily, he wants people to say "Gee, he's a smart guy!" This seems to be a mark of the 'new age' writer. His texts just drag out. Much like how Stephen King
Re:One more step to complete money disaster (Score:2)
Money itself never has to have value. Trade originally meant two persons exchanging something they have for something more valuable to them. If you have eggs, and I have dirt, I'll give you enough dirt to get eggs that are more valuable to me than the dirt. But you're getting dirt that is more valuable to you than the eggs.
As Rothbard opined in the link I posted, true money has a free market value that allows indirect bartering. I
Re:Money and value (Score:2)
Yes, but the parent poster's point was essentially: how long will it retain it's value? It certainly is a good point (if quite a bit over-dramatic) as we've seen incredible inflation, long and short-term. An interesting point, is that you shouldn't even bother saving-up for retirement until you are in your 40s, or so, because a month's worth of pay when you're 20, will just about be the equivalent of a day's pay when you're about
Re:Money and value (Score:2)
If you want an inflation adjusted investment, buy an I bond, or a company.
Not saving for retirement is a bad idea. You can still easily double your money after inflation.
Re:Money and value (Score:2)
And where are you getting this information that contradicts the universally-accepted facts?
Gold doesn't go belly-up. Gold keeps it's value better than just about anything else, without any risk at all.
I never said anything of the sort... Just that: A) Starting to save too early is not very productive.
B) Savings
Re:Money and value (Score:2)
And where are you getting this information that contradicts the universally-accepted facts?
I have not even heard of your universally accepted fact, let alone accepted it.
I got my information from several financial history resources (sites and articles and data).
Gold keeps its value, only keeps its value.
I bonds grow in value, companies (if selected properly) also grow.
A) Starting to save early is very very productive.
Re:Eco misses the whole point. (Score:5, Insightful)
What are you talking about? What in Eco's article made you believe he didn't realize this advantage of hypertext? What point did he miss?
In fact, he makes essentially your point in the article, which leads me to believe you must only have skimmed through it:
In order to confirm this I would probably need to consult a biography of Kant, or of Napoleon, but in a short biography of Napoleon, who met so many persons in his life, a possible meeting with Kant can be disregarded, while in a biography of Kant a meeting with Napoleon would be recorded. In brief, I must leaf through many books on many shelves of my library; I must take notes in order to compare later all the data I have collected. All this will cost me painful physical labour.
Yet, with hypertext instead I can navigate through the whole net-cyclopaedia. I can connect an event registered at the beginning with a series of similar events disseminated throughout the text; I can compare the beginning with the end; I can ask for a list of all words beginning by A; I can ask for all the cases in which the name of Napoleon is linked with the one of Kant; I can compare the dates of their births and deaths -- in short, I can do my job in a few seconds or a few minutes.
Re:Eco misses the whole point. (Score:2)
"Yet, with hypertext instead I can navigate through the whole net-cyclopaedia.
Eco is too complicated to jump to assumptions about what his point is. His point is usually more subtle than most. It's often necessary to read everything he says. The way most people write, you ca
Re:Eco misses the whole point. (Score:2)