4. Using computers for realtime control was pretty new at the time.
It's easy to take for granted now, but in the 60s, computers were typically ~room-sized and communicated by readouts. To hook one up to some actuators and use for mission-critical tasks was 
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But in reality, the internet was built up slowly. And our appreciation got smeared out over decades, rather than focused onto a single celebratory moment.
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What else is out there, similar to the Moon landing? (This is a genuine question; I'd love to hear ideas.) What might we achieve in the next 50–100 years that can be celebrated all at once?
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I don't think there's anything quite like getting to the Moon (although I'd love to be proven wrong). Nothing as symbolic and intuitive even to children. Certainly putting someone on Mars will be *awesome*. But it's just not as novel. We already took the low-hanging orb.
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So that's why I think the Moon landing was so exceptional. Not because it's a height of progress we won't see again, but because it was our biggest and best shot at a singular technological *performance*. And we nailed it :D
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End of conversation
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I know when the first modern implementation of the computer with a GUI, mouse, and word processor was shown at The Mother of All Demos, supposedly most of the attendees didn’t get it. The ones who were most excited were the secretaries who actually dealt with word processing
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