Earth planet, October 29, 2009


At 10:30 p.m. on October 29, 1969, Charley Kline, one of my programmers, and I sat down and started to log on from UCLA to SRI [Stanford Research Institute]. This was a big event, because it was going to test communication  on this first link of the nascent Internet called the Arpanet. Charley was at the keyboard. He did the typing. We had the telephone headset, so we could speak to SRI. All we wanted to do was log on. So Charley typed an L.
"You get the L?" "Got the L"
"Did you get the O?" "Got the O"
Typed the G. "Did you get the G?" And crash!
The system went down. That baby crashed. There had been a memory overflow at SRI. We liked that, because it wasn't our machine, and secondly it wasn't the network. That was most important. So the first message wasn't "What hath God wrought?". It wasn't "This is a giant leap for mankind". It even, you know, "Come here, Watson. I need you." Those guys were smart. They had a great message planned ahead of time. They understood the media and PR, and they had the press there. We had nobody, no camera, no voice recorder, nothing. So the first message ever sent on the Internet was "Lo" as in "Lo and behold." Truth is, we couldn't have created a better, more concise message. It was prophetic.

Leonard Kleinrock
- article by Debbie Kim in Los Angeles magazine

 

 

 


Earth planet, October 22, 2009


"Ogni cambiamento tecnologico è un cambiamento generazionale. Tutta la potenza di una nuova tecnologia, e tutte le sue conseguenze, appaiono con chiarezza solo quando le persone che sono cresciute con essa diventano adulte ed iniziano a spingere ai margini i loro genitori, che ormai non sono più al passo coi tempi. A mano a mano che le generazioni più vecchie muoiono, portano con sé la consapevolezza di ciò che si è perduto quando è arrivata la nuova tecnologia; rimane solo la consapevolezza di ciò che si è guadagnato. E' in questo modo che il progresso fa perdere le sue tracce, rinnovando perpetuamente l'illusione che il punto in cui ci troviamo sia il punto in cui eravamo destinati ad arrivare."

Nicholas Carr
- Il lato oscuro della rete

 


Earth planet, September 4, 2009


E' evidente che la forma non ha grande importanza se dietro ad un'idea c'è sostanza e passione. Pochi potevano immaginare cosa si celava dietro a queste poche e sgraziate righe html.
Google, a large-scale hypertextual web search engine

Larry Page