Jed--

 Thanks for the observations of Clarke--its is an optimistic observation as are 
many regarding LENR.  The pessimistic ones don't seem to be coming up as often. 
  

Bob --an old optimist
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jed Rothwell 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, February 07, 2014 12:19 PM
  Subject: [Vo]:Clarke describes the Internet in 1972


  It is often said that people cannot predict future technology, even a few 
decades in advance. Some people cannot, but others can. Here is something 
Arthur Clarke wrote in 1972. He and others predicted the Internet and many of 
its ramifications.




  . . . It will be a future in which men do much less commuting and more 
communicating. Even today, probably 90 percent of the average executive's 
business could be performed without leaving home, by the use of equipment which 
is already available on an experimental basis. During the next decade, we will 
see the evolution of a general-purpose, home-communications console providing 
two-way vision, hard-copy readout so that diagrams and printed material can be 
exchanged, and a keyboard to allow "conversation" with the computers and 
information banks upon which our world will increasingly depend.

  Before we consider its practicability, let us see what we could do with such 
a device. Far more than business discussions and conferences would be possible; 
the housewife could go shopping by dialing the catalogue of her favorite 
stores; scholars and students would have instant access to any book or 
periodical stored in the global electronic library; this minute's news, 
continually updated, would be displayed in printed headlines, and any selected 
item could be expanded as desired, according to taste. This, incidentally, 
raises the possibility of something quite new -- the "personalized" electronic 
news service, tailored to the interests of the individual subscriber!

  Today, such a receiving console would cost tens of thousands of dollars-and 
would be useless, because the communications network to service it does not yet 
exist. But this network will be built up during the next decades; one of the 
great enterprises of the twentieth century will be the establishment, with the 
help of satellites, of a planetary "information grid." It will join the other 
networks we have developed during the last hundred and fifty years, and which 
we now take so much for granted that we forget their existence, except when 
they break down. Chronologically, they are: water, sewerage, gas, electricity, 
telephone -- and now cable TV, or video. The forthcoming information grid will 
absorb the last two. . . .





  - Jed

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