hello" this thread has been fantastic to read i wish a grad student would take some time to write up the history of computing on campus by interviewing all of you and more of the people that made computing here at Berkeley. cheers to all of you that have been here to see us grow and become a community. keep sharing your memorys its otherwise a disk fail when we don't have access to the system your brains all is i love the way you all help us realize that it may be hard today but it would be nothing with out our past. lucy
Lucia Greco Web Accessibility Evangelist IST - Architecture, Platforms, and Integration University of California, Berkeley (510) 289-6008 skype: lucia1-greco http://webaccess.berkeley.edu Follow me on twitter @accessaces On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 8:03 PM, Aron Roberts <a...@socrates.berkeley.edu> wrote: > Mike's reminiscences about the wonders of nascent cell phones and > wireless networks, and Al's about late '90s OCR, both recall this > Arthur C. Clarke quote: > > "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." > > (This and more: > http://www.clarkefoundation.org/sample-page/sir-arthurs-quotations/) > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > The following was automatically added to this message by the list server: > > To learn more about Micronet, including how to subscribe to or unsubscribe > from its mailing list and how to find out about upcoming meetings, please > visit the Micronet Web site: > > http://micronet.berkeley.edu > > Messages you send to this mailing list are public and world-viewable, and > the list's archives can be browsed and searched on the Internet. This > means these messages can be viewed by (among others) your bosses, > prospective employers, and people who have known you in the past. > > ANNOUNCEMENTS: To send announcements to the Micronet list, please use the > micronet-annou...@lists.berkeley.edu list. >
------------------------------------------------------------------------- The following was automatically added to this message by the list server: To learn more about Micronet, including how to subscribe to or unsubscribe from its mailing list and how to find out about upcoming meetings, please visit the Micronet Web site: http://micronet.berkeley.edu Messages you send to this mailing list are public and world-viewable, and the list's archives can be browsed and searched on the Internet. This means these messages can be viewed by (among others) your bosses, prospective employers, and people who have known you in the past. ANNOUNCEMENTS: To send announcements to the Micronet list, please use the micronet-annou...@lists.berkeley.edu list.