http://threewordchant.com/2010/02/24/why-the-internet-will-fail-from-1995/
3/8/2010 9:12:41 AM
Time for a:Why This Article Failed
3/8/2010 9:14:33 AM
I absolutely love reading predictions from the past of today's "future." There's a great blog that I follow that is basically a repository of these:http://www.paleofuture.com/
3/8/2010 9:19:28 AM
3/8/2010 9:53:08 AM
^How could you possibly not see how the internet will change (or has already changed,) the way government works? Are you interpreting that in some particular way?-------------------
3/8/2010 10:14:49 AM
...cont'
3/8/2010 10:15:29 AM
^^what, are you trolling or really that stupid?---HAHA, that article was written by Cliff Stoll, author of The Cuckoo's Egg. It's pretty hilarious that someone who's pretty well regarded in tech circles could have been so wrong.Two possibilities1) He was ordered by his editor to write a piece from this perspective2) He was trolling the fuck out of the future.[Edited on March 8, 2010 at 10:29 AM. Reason : .]
3/8/2010 10:23:28 AM
I suppose it has changed the way it works.I was more thinking about how it is still bloated, inefficient, redundant, etc when, given current technology, there is no excuse to continue to exist that way.
3/8/2010 10:38:43 AM
haha, well nothing will ever change that particular aspect of government.
3/8/2010 10:42:42 AM
3/8/2010 10:45:38 AM
3/8/2010 11:08:16 AM
I stopped reading the Napster article at:
3/8/2010 11:10:57 AM
^^^looking at it as an absolute of "CD-ROM" is a bit pedantic. That was the best form of content delivery back in 1995. In 2010, an enormous amount of coursework, training, and learning are done electronically via the web. Electronic learning HAS replaced instructor led learning in a significant way. I'll agree that it will never be a 100% replacement, but it's extremely commonplace and just as effective for most applications.
3/8/2010 11:30:45 AM
^
3/8/2010 11:51:52 AM
3/8/2010 12:03:59 PM
3/8/2010 12:15:50 PM
I don't disagree there either. You certainly don't want to rely on rich media as the main vehicle for primary or secondary education (as an easy example). Even at the college level and beyond, with rich media education, you definitely lose a valuable teaching tool in classroom interaction, and for certain types of learning the interaction is far more important than the content, and live learning will always be critical in those cases. Not having been in that type of environment, I would assume that courses where the Socratic method is employed is an example of this. But, going back to the original point, electronic learning HAS replaced instructor led training enough to where education delivery has evolved from what it was 15 years ago as a direct result of computing technology and the Internet.
3/8/2010 12:31:17 PM
I heard a fairly compelling argument from one individual who said technology may change fast, but human culture / behavior does not.I think the article was a bit biased, but had some (a little...) merit to its arguments.
3/8/2010 6:38:42 PM
people always predict the future to be "Now - But MORE!" He probably also thought that pants would parachute to unfathomable sizes. ]
3/8/2010 8:08:35 PM
3/8/2010 8:50:32 PM
^^ lol
3/8/2010 9:22:21 PM
3/8/2010 9:52:30 PM
3/8/2010 10:05:55 PM
3/8/2010 10:56:40 PM
3/8/2010 11:20:37 PM
3/8/2010 11:22:40 PM
3/8/2010 11:37:15 PM
3/9/2010 12:21:24 AM
^ I've always wondered how they get those test scores because I can tell you right now, most of my students in Japan are just as dumb in math and science as American students.
3/9/2010 12:54:32 AM
Reminds me of:
3/9/2010 3:12:14 AM
^^that's good to know
3/9/2010 7:07:18 AM
On the other hand, check out these AT&T ads from 1993. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4PJcABbtvtA
3/9/2010 7:54:23 AM
3/9/2010 7:58:03 AM
^ I read that, but I remember his argument had to do more with black women unable to find work anywhere due to racism, back in the day.
3/9/2010 11:20:17 AM
sounds like you didn't read it then.
3/9/2010 11:39:51 AM
I'd just like to know exactly where this dramatic drop off in teacher competence took place during the mid eighties. Was it at the peak of trapper keepers or had slap bracelets just started becoming popular? I'm dying to know when!
3/9/2010 12:34:35 PM
^^^ I'm reading Outliers now. I'm about half way through it and haven't seen anything about black women, racism, and teaching jobs that i recall. And I just started reading it a few days ago, so I don't think I've simply forgotten the section.BobbyDigital is correct in regard to what Gladwell suggests at times (at least through the first half of the book). But I'll add 2 things to what he said: Gladwell was referring to primary and secondary education, not higher ed. And it also has to do with market saturation. The more educated people you have, the more likely you are to have a highly/better educated person in a position you wouldn't typically find them in. And unfortunately... teaching is more than often one of those positions.
3/9/2010 12:41:55 PM
3/9/2010 1:01:49 PM
I pay to read the Journal and the Times archives, but for the most part, the precedent for free online newspaper has been set, and it will be very hard to engineer an industry-wide shift to a pay model
3/9/2010 1:41:00 PM