Corpora: ILASH Seminar-Ted Nelson-CHANGE OF VENUE

Ekaterini Pastra e.pastra at dcs.shef.ac.uk
Thu Nov 8 12:10:01 UTC 2001


Dear all,

please note a change of venue for the ILASH Seminar:

Prof. Ted Nelson,
11:00 a.m.
Lecture Theatre, St. George Church
St. George Terrace and Portobello Street
Sheffield, U.K.

TITLE:
"Ideas, the Final Frontier:
 Computers Beyond Hierarchy and the Web beyond HTML"

ABSTRACT:
Most uses of computers simulate either hierarchy, paper, or both
(Acrobat
and the Web).  Hierarchy is notably unsuited to most human thought,
creativity, and ongoing changes of projects; paper is a form of
confinement
to which we have adapted for two millennia, though the ideas have tried
to
escape for a thousand years-- through footnotes, annotations,
parallelisms,
and creative layout.

If we dare to challenge these traditions, the alternatives still need
structuring for implementation.  The issue is the optimal representation
of
ideas-- what relations among discrete structures can best replace
hierarhical directories, and what generalizations of electronic document

will allow profuse bidirectional connections, track content flow from
version to version, allow publishing of annotations and ongoing parallel

documents, and permit large-scale quotation of copyrighted material?
(All are vital for a true electronic literature.)
The alternatives Ted proposes are simple, straightforward, and deeply
different from the prevailing paradigms.

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Ted Nelson is a Project Professor at Keio University in Fujisawa, Japan.

"From October 1960, Ted firmly predicted the era of
 personal computing and mass-marketed software
 as a direct extrapolation of early CRT-based computers,
 (such as the PDP-1 of that year); the universal migration
 of work to computer screens; interactive media based on
 pesonal computers, generalizing writing and movies
 as we already knew them; and populist world-wide
 uncontrollable anarchic hypertext based also on personal
 computers, both as distributed small servers and as
 mass-market clients.

 He did not make these predictions diplomatically,
 so that many who heard him were enraged at the time
 and do not like to remember or acknowledge now that
 he said all these things that early.  (Indeed, very little
 that he said was actually comprehended.)

 In his software designs he has always urged breaking away
 from the paper model, rather than imitating paper--
 but since the Xerox PARC interfaces were popularized
 in 1984 as the Macintosh, computers have been made
 to imitate paper.  This is rather like the way that trained
 animals are made to imitate people, because it makes
 people feel comfortable, unthreatened and smug.

 Ted has always had a complete general design for a
 complete general alternative world of software, based on
 parallel documents, deep interconnection, side-by-side
 intercomparison and swooping high performance,
 massive rearrangement with origins showing, and new
 forms of copyright permission and micropayment.
 The details of this vision and design have continually
 changed, but the ideas have stayed the same.  These
 designs have been generally considered ignorant, silly,
 bizarre, too radical, unimaginable, impossible, deranged,
 delirious, insane and crazed.
"Until now."

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

More details and a poster for the event can be downloaded at:
http://www.dcs.shef.ac.uk/research/ilash/Seminars/index.html

Best,
Katerina Pastra

-------------------------------------------------------------
Katerina Pastra
Research Assistant - ILASH Research Co-ordinator
Natural Language Processing Group
Department of Computer Science
University of Sheffield
tel. +44 114 2221945
fax +44 114 2221810
http://www.dcs.shef.ac.uk/~katerina



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