2009-08-13

Paleotech, through the eyes of a Millenial...

What happens when you give a modern teenager a Walkman? You get some interesting insights about technology. It's amazing how far technology has come -- and a reminder that yes, there really is such a thing as paleotechnology. (For us children of the 70s, the fact that cassette tapes have two sides is completely intuitive. For someone seeing a Walkman for the first time, perhaps not.) For how many other forms of technology might we forget some of the nuances, or even some of the important things?



Fellow paleotechnology expert DOSquatch writes about the subtle yet extremely important art of troubleshooting. He definitely has a point. I would also add that it's important to document technologies as they are developed, lest we end up having to reinvent them all over again to get them to work (or end up breaking them inadvertently).

Actually, the comparison between a Walkman and modern mp3 players is a good example of how technology is not only progressing, but accelerating. When my grandparents went on a trip to Japan and brought back one of the first electronic calculators, it was definitely new -- but easily understood in a few minutes. When cassettes started to take over some of the role of record players*, they too were relatively easily understood. Increasingly, though, the capabilities of new devices are breaking down old barriers and requiring new ways of thinking about things. (This isn't necessarily a Bad Thing, but it bears mentioning.)

For instance, try explaining the subtle relationship between mp3 files and playlists to someone who doesn't truly grok filesystems, shortcuts, and links. You might be able to explain it, but it will take a lot of explaining. Try a more advanced topic, like why a satellite-modem connection works fine for streaming audio but is horrible for interactive websites -- and the explanation can take much longer. Bring DRM, P2P, streaming, file sizes, bitrates, codecs, protocols, IP addresses, connectivity, lag, bandwidth, Bluetooth, AC3 and oversampling into the conversation, and suddenly you're speaking a foreign language.

Technological progress is definitely accelerating, and every year, I hear more and more people talk about the Singularity. I'm even starting to believe it myself. A lot of it does sound farfetched -- yet technical progress in many fields is starting to look asymptotic. We definitely live in interesting times: they say that by 2025, supercomputers should be sufficiently powerful to run realtime simulations of the human brain. With computer speeds doubling every year or two, we could well end up as spectators to the fastest and most profound changes in history.

As long as we can control the direction things take, though, I, for one, welcome our new robotic overlords.




* Yeah, yeah. Nobody, least of all me, is going to claim that cassettes beat LPs for audio quality. I draw the line at CDs, though. Maybe 44.1kHz/16bit isn't optimal, but it sure beats dragging a rock through a plastic groove.

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2009-01-09

Windows 7

What could the newly-released beta of Windows 7 have to do with paleotechnology, you ask? It has everything to do with it, when good ol' DOS is looking better and better all the time!

I don't know about you, but the following disclaimer on the Windows 7 download page bothers me. The emphasis is mine; the apocalyptic language is all Micro$oft's...


To protect your MP3 files
1. Before you install this Beta release, back up all MP3 files that might be accessed by the computer, including those on removable media or network shares.
2. Install the Beta release of Windows 7; download and install the Update to Windows 7 Beta (KB961367) located on this page.


I think I just got inspired to try out Linux as a desktop OS this weekend. No OS -- and no application -- should ever consider itself as the be-all and end-all music file Gestapo. This is exactly what I don't like about iTunes/iPod (and to be fair, similar features in Windows Media Player; I'm an equal-opportunity curmudgeon.) Data (be it text, graphics, mp3s, presentations, whatever) should be in as open a format as possible. This is why mp3s are so popular in the first place.

Whatever prompted Microsoft to issue such a worrisome disclaimer about mp3 files (and not hide it deep in the EULA-that-nobody-ever-reads) has got to be bad. What does it do, automatically collect all mp3s it can find into a WMP library and "thoughtfully" convert them to WMA for the user's "convenience??"

Be afraid. Be very afraid.

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