How Computers Transformed Baby Boomers 182
theodp writes "Newsweek's Steven Levy takes a look at how the baby boomer generation formed our tech landscape. Many of the realities boomers grew up with are today's metaphors, including cut-and-paste, the origin of which the 56-year-old Levy had to explain to 20-something Google employees. Levy cites two texts as crucial in pushing the boomers' vision toward power-to-the-people computing — Ted Nelson's Computer Lib/Dream Machines, which inspired Mitch Kapor, and the January 1975 Popular Electronics, which got Bill Gates jazzed. You kids might want to check out Dad's bookshelf — used copies of Computer Lib are going for $130-$225 at Amazon."
I've got a copy (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder why it's so expensive? The book is terrible, virtually unreadable. Ted Nelson is a nutcase by all reports. Look at the repeated failures of his Xanadu idea.
I guess I should probably sell it; it has no value to me and $150-200 would be pretty nice.
Re:I've got a copy (Score:5, Insightful)
being well ahead of it's time. Heh... Some nutcase-you're using the same stuff he's talking about
in that flip-flop book to make the post calling him a nutball- it's just not the full monty as it
were. Hyper-G was closer, much closer, but they made a mistake in making the reference implementation
proprietary, whereas NCSA made the first HTTP server effectively open source and the child of that
implementation is the #1 web server right at the moment.
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Old Computer Books Sell Well (Score:2, Interesting)
The big prices show something that is true of a large number of computer books. When the books are out of print they can shoot way up in price. Often you will find some poor schmuck having to support a legacy program and they are willing to spend a good deal of money on used books.
If you happen to have computer books for older versions of so
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Because scarcity is like heroin to booksellers. We are cutthroat savages every last one of us.
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I wonder why it's so expensive? The book is terrible, virtually unreadable. Ted Nelson is a nutcase by all reports.
Seriously... I checked out this book in my university library in oh, like 1987 or so (because I had heard a lot of the hype about Xanadu) and my general impression was "this is really stupid." It's got to be the most absurdl
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And yet you remember cheking it out of the library twenty years ago. It must have made some impression other than, "this is really stupid."
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Scrollbars (Score:5, Funny)
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Ah, well. You try and tell the young people of today that, and they won't believe you.
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This Just In-- (Score:3, Funny)
Generation X (Score:2)
Of course, computers used to fill entire rooms and governments and businesses adopted them but as I see it, my generation (usually referred to as Generation X) made up a large portion of the early adopters of personal computers and computing devices. We were the first people to buy or build computers that cost more than the car that we drove or would cost several months o
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Of course, my anecdotal evidence will not be the same as everyone else, especially since I grew up in a very small, rural town in the Midwest. I only know of one Boomer that had an Apple that she used for her work at a community college. He
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By 1984, when you bought your TRS-80 at a yard sale (no doubt dropped o
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You think that's changed in just ten years?
Nephilium
I've *done* cut-and-paste... (Score:5, Informative)
...and it works spectacularly well.
The modern version works like this: you need a photocopier, your source material, a pair of scissors, and a stick of solid glue. Photocopy all your source materials. Cut them up. Stick them onto a blank piece of paper in the order you want. Photocopy. All the seams miraculously vanish, and you end up with an extremely professional-looking end result.
It's a great deal easier than scanning and using a DTP package, it's faster, and it can also produce better results depending on your photocopier and scanner. I wouldn't use it for anything that needed to be stored for long periods of time --- your template is fragile and will fall apart if stored --- but for quickly putting together posters, exam questions (I inherited the technique from my father, who was a teacher), simple fliers, news clipping collections etc, it's first rate.
Don't get glue on the photocopier plate. It'll never come off.
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A few tips, while we're at it: don't worry about getting the seams glued down. They'll show up anyway -- lighten the document, or if your copier supports it, decrease the contrast and increase the brightness. If you're working on a relatively recent and well-kept copier, you
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Not at all snarky --- I'm quite serious! The more I use computers, the more I appreciate techniques that don't use them...
We used a dab of solid glue in the middle of each stuck-on section, just to hold it in place. (Pritt-Stick, usually.) That stuff's excellent because you can just pull it apart again to rearrange. We never had any problems with visible seams, but then in those days it was all analog copiers in high-contrast mode, and putting the lid down would flatten the copy sufficiently. When photocop
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From the old hs newspaper days, when everything had to be sent out for typesetting, and then returned for cut up, and pasting for the master, which was shipped back for printing. Computers printed on teletypes or line printers,
Selectrics were the typewriter to have.
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Hell, I think I've still got a hot wax rig and roller in the garage someplace.
And unless you're careful about your assembly, and get the edges right, the seams do NOT miraculously vanish. They're quite visible, actually.
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I think this just speaks loudly about my (our, i'm guessing) current generation and the way we've grown up with the web and computers. It's amazing that we can be marveled by techniques that were and still are so common place. Maybe I should consider myself lucky that I grew up with a parent who taught because i spent many a day in the educational resource centers helping create handouts, transparencies, and lamin
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In the old days of typesetting machines, the output would be on a one line paper tape. The setup person would cut the paper tape and glue it to a larger paper to make paragraphs. This was then photographed on a type of film whose name escapes me now, but it had exactly two tones, black and white. By adjusting the exposure, all the seams and any dust or marks could be made to disappear. The phontnegative would then be contact printed onto
In other news (Score:4, Funny)
I call "B.S." on the "cut-and-paste" example... (Score:2)
I call B.S. on this one. Anyone dumb enough not to figure out where "cut and paste" came from doesn't deserve a job (must less a promotion to second grade).
Re:I call "B.S." on the "cut-and-paste" example... (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, I can't speak to 20-something google employees, but when I acquired a 1930's Underwood typewriter a couple of years ago, the 12 year old son of a friend looked at it and asked what it was. I asked him what it looked like, and he replied that it looked something like a keyboard. He didn't know what a typewriter was.
Admittedly the kid is not the sharpest knife in the drawer, but I suspect that he's reasonably representative of his peer group.
Now that I think about it, the second graders might do better than a 12 year old. They're not heading into that teen recalcitrant thing and their imagination hasn't been spiked yet.
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I think it's hard to imagine how kids are perceiving these things. I know kids in their late teens who use computers every day, but who don't really even understand what a command line is. They don't remember what computers were like before Windows 95 came out. They don't really remember there ever not being an Internet, and barely remember what dial-up was like before their parents got cable/DSL.
What I'm trying to point out is the degree to which they take these things for granted. For them, "cut" and
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My pet peeve is UNIX programmers who don't understand the origin of the fork() system call. You can't properly understand a system unless you understand why it was designed the way it was.
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My pet peeve is UNIX programmers who don't understand the origin of the fork() system call.
OK, I'll bite. What's the origin and how is it relevant?
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Fortunatel
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Or maybe they were sick of his examples and decided to let him explain everything, all the time, just to see how stupid it got.
Or maybe it just doesn't matter?
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I can hazard a guess or two on the origins of cut-and-paste based on the term and its possible etymology, but no, I cannot say for certain where it came from.
And why do you think I would have to? And what makes you think that I should know where it came from?
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I'm about the age of the typical google employee. I
Ralroads and electricity were much bigger (Score:5, Insightful)
Railroads and electricity made much bigger changes in people's lives. Before railroads, most people spent their lives within 50 miles of their birthplace. Before electricity, it was, well, dark at night almost everywhere. Huge amounts of effort went into activities like basic cooking and cleaning clothes.
The changes between 1850 and 1900 were far, far greater than those between 1950 and 2000. In communications, in 1950 we had radio, television, teletype, and telephones. Even newspaper delivery via broadcast radio fax, although that never really caught on. Most important info was getting to its destination fast. Most of the communication things you can do today, you could do in 1950, but more expensively.
No you couldn't (Score:2)
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Before railroads you could travel, it was just ridiculously expensive.
Ever travel a hundred miles on horseback?
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They use robots to make cars instead of humans.
I use an automated dialer system when I call the pharmacy. I use ATMs instead of live bank tellers, at least when I withdraw money--and these days, money can change hands without anything physical changing hands, which is why Amazon.com is doing so well. I have used supermarkets' autocheckers.
I have seen the "tollbooth" lanes which have no real booths because they are tripped by RFID
levy (Score:5, Insightful)
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Time to feed Mr Fusion... (Score:4, Funny)
Not your fathers' boomers (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me get this straight... (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes (Score:3, Insightful)
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Not to mention neglecting their children, undermining the education system, off-shoring their jobs, and wracking up a national debt that their great-grandchildren will be trying to pay off. They continue to ignore the problems of Social Security and Medicare and had the gall to add on prescription drugs to an already massively overburdened Medicare budget. When faced with the terrible reality of the mess that
Sell Dad's back issues?? (Score:2, Informative)
Just for the record, kids - you try pulling this shit and Dad will spank your arse, no matter whether you're bigger than him now or not.
Can't resist... (Score:2)
I wonder if Gates realizes how much this might apply to his company (old guard) versus open source / open standards (next generation)?
Meh. I imagine he pays someone to write his crap, anyway. He co
Oh my. (Score:2)
I guess all that drinking 19th century wines and fucking whores on piles of $100 bills must have erased their memory of kindergarten.
when will telephone numbers die? (Score:2)
most people bored my "old stuff" (Score:2)
Slide Rules - why did we bother? (Score:2)
He looked at it for a few moments and then asked, "Why didn't y
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Now, baby boomers include anyone who is 42 to 64.
I always heard the post WWII baby boom occurred between 1945 and 1960. Some people have tried to extend it to the mid sixties but you're the first I've heard trying to extend it back into the early 40s. I have older cousins who were born then. They have as different a mindset from those of us who grew up in the 60s as the people who were born in the 60s.
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which roughly correlates to an increase in the number of births that occurred after the end of World War II
http://geography.about.com/od/populationgeography/a/babyboom_2.htm/ [about.com]
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And believe me, MILITARY health care sucks worse than civilian health care. Ask any vet.
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My wife and I are Vietnam era veterans who have opted to receive health care through the VA and that has not been our experience. We were never happy with the care my Blue Cross retirement plan provided. We still make co-payments, pay for office visits and prescriptions and Blue Cross picks up 80% after an annual $1,000 deductible for each of us. The big difference for us is that the quality of care from the VA is much
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Hahahahahah! Boy, are you ever wrong! I'm a 'Nam vet, and get all my medical coverage through the VA. That includes prescriptions, doctor visits, free hearing aids and a new set of glasses once a year if my eyes change enough to need them. Right now, I'm unemployed because my job's been outsourced, so all of that -- all of that, mind you -- is free. Not even a copay, which I'd be billed for if I had a job. Given
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Baby Boomers (of which I am one, and about which you know nothing) are not a homogenous group to be lumped together in your stereotypingm and have not claimed to created or invented everything, at least not any more than any other cohort has.
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Pffft. Me me me! Look at me! I'm an individual! Typical baby boomer. ;-P
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Re:As a member of "GenX" let me say ... (Score:4, Insightful)
I had the same thought while reading that article.
Where does Steven Levy think transistors came from? Or electricity, or math?
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If you grew up loving video games, you're part of the computer generation. If you grew up before the rise of coin operated video arcade games, like my boomer parents, then you're sort of perpetually outside of it.
This is an clear way to see how computing works in society because it's not age based. As it happens, historically this aligns pretty well with the p
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And Bill Gates has contributed far more to computing than any dozen gamerzzz have.
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But I can go back old school as far as you can. I happen to have done extensive research on the economic implications of punch card based lace machines in the eighteenth century. You wanna get old-school bitch?
The point is, although modern computational techniques clearly can trace their lineage to the eighteenth century, the eighteenth century is not
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The WW2 generation created the basis for modern computing. The first computer was built in 1946 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ENIAC [wikipedia.org](Eniac), long before the Baby Boomers even existed. While I might conce
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as a boomer let me say (Score:2, Insightful)
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- ENIAC was not the first (digital) computer. The Atanasoff-Berry Computer [wikipedia.org] (ABC) was, as it was built in 1941.
- Consumerism was not solely a baby boomer trait, but started in the late 1800's with Ivory soap and took hold in the early 20th century.
I don't have enough knowledge of Vietnam to confirm or deny your accusation, so I won't.
As with all generations, the boomer have a lasting impact on the future generations of humanity. At the very least, they conceived and taught the
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The Kent State shootings [wikipedia.org] certainly didn't seem to help. Going by the worldwidee shock that was expressed after the Virginia Tech shootings, I can only imagine what the shock must have been back thirty years. From wikipedia, over eight million students at high schools and colleges we
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Highly relevant to this discussion and the topic of Boomers + computers + consumer state is the BBC series produced by Adam Curtis, The Century Of The Self. The second
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Given expected technology development, 120 is the least I'll live to - IF I don't die before, say, 80.
Anybody under 40 will have an indefinite life span. Anybody between 40 and 60 has to play the odds - the older you are the less likely you'll make it without a cryonic contract or excellent health care. Anybody over 60 today needs a cryonic contract because it's very unlikely they'll make it unless they are already in excellent health and can afford excellent health care.
Of course, once Transhumans com
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Personally, I'd rather be a nut.
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Re:The title is reversed... Sheesh, editors. (Score:4, Funny)
No, it's not reversed... (Score:2)
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Generation Y (Score:2, Interesting)
And the internet and computers have not changed my simple life all that much from my fathers. Yes, I post on an internet discussion, but: I get up in the morning, get in my EFI ran car, but for the end user its not
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-scott [a not-20-something Googler]
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Most of the people who _did_ stuff_ on that platform were Xers. Yep, I are one, right at the front of the wave.
Technologically, you're wrong. Now, in terms of finance and multigenerational ethics [msn.com] I might be more inclned to agree with you.
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It could be worse - we could be reduced to scriptoria [uni-klu.ac.at]
RS