Of course, information overload is intrinsically an insoluble problem. Understanding is so valuable that we will always push ourselves to our limits in managing information, no matter how good our tools become, & feel uncomfortable as we push up against them.
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Anyways, there's much, much more in the article. Well worth reading!
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More fun things: see
@hyfen's project to build a memex: https://hyfen.net/memex/Show this thread -
And
@TrevorFSmith's memex: https://trevor.smith.name/memex/Show this thread -
Just a small appendix. Reading back over my thread, it's got too much of the "gee-whiz, wasn't that a clever insight of a giant of the past" trope about it.
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Yes, Bush was clever. But that's not so interesting. I think it's more interesting to think about the big, broad fundamental questions he was addressing, and how far we are from really solving them.
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How to manage information overload? What are the real bottlenecks? How can we make vastly better computer note taking systems? Why haven't we gone beyond the file metaphor? How can we build better personal memory systems? Better collective memory systems? So many great problems!
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Yes. Pascal Zachary’s “Endless Frontier: Vannevar Bush, Engineer of the American Century” (1977) is an excellent biography https://www.amazon.com/Endless-Frontier-Vannevar-Engineer-American/dp/0684828219/ …
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My typo: it’s (1997). No Kindle
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I remember watching an interview in which Engelbart expressed a deep soddenness that Bush never warmed up to his NLS prototypes and ideas (he was of course, also sad that people missed the point of his bootstrap program).
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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