The Look Of The Future Past
Grok Headline matches for The Look Of The Future Past
Intel looks to the future--and the past
Intel looks to the future--and the past
04/14/2005 09:47 PMCNET News.com Apr 15 2005 1:09AM GMT
The future and past of journalism
The future and past of journalism
06/05/2005 11:34 PMScott Rosenberg has written a very nice essay on the future of
journalism in the age when anyone can publish. He has caught the
moment that we stand in well, with the old media monopolies dying but
not dead, and the new media struggling to be born, but not clear what
it will be born as. He captures well a phenomenon that experienced in
my teens and will never forget, the experience of having someone
report on something you know well, and discovering how flawed and
human supposedly authoritative institutions like major newspapers are.
In my case, I was living in Niger in West Africa, and I once met the
Washington Post journalist who was responsible for covering the entire
continent of Africa (which is by itself an amazing fact). He spent 5
days in the country and then left, not to return again for a year or
so, and on the basis of those 5 days wrote 5 or so articles on events
and trends in Niger, each of which contained things stated as facts
that I thought were patently false. It was a good learning experience
for a future political activist. I suspect that, in spite of the many
reasons why the existing institutions and practicioners of journalism
should be able to see the writing on the wall, we are entering another
period of Schumpeterian Creative Destruction. I also suspect that what
arises from the ashes that we will recognize as journalism will arise
from the mix of new sources like blogs, group blogs, indymedia, PLOS,
Kuroshin, etc. not from the transformation of existing
institutions....
Future missive from your own past self
Future missive from your own past self
07/12/2004 10:48 PMLos Angeles Times Jul 13 2004 3:24AM GMT
Tales Of Future Past
Tales Of Future Past
05/25/2004 07:16 PMHere's an interesting
review
that covers
tales of future
past -- a website dedicated to collecting images of distant worlds
and futures, as predicted by old magazines and science fiction. And
there's also
RetroFuture to
help you remember flying cars and smell-o-vision. Ah, yes, remember
when computers were predicted to beat us all at chess? Oh wait.
Tales of the Future Past
Tales of the Future Past
05/28/2004 03:24 PMThe future in the web's past
The future in the web's past
06/24/2004 01:30 AMNews.bbc.co.uk - Tue Jun 22, 12:35 pm GMT
The Industrial Revolution, past and
future
The Industrial Revolution, past and
future
06/13/2004 06:16 PM
The
Industrial Revolution, past and future:
The entire
human race is getting rich, at historically unprecedented rates. The
economic miracles of East Asia are, of course, atypical in their
magnitudes, but economic growth is not the exception in the world
today: It is the rule.
Nobel Prize winner
Robert
Lucas discusses wealth redistribution and the world economy.
Telecom future to look a lot like the
past - study
Telecom future to look a lot like the
past - study
06/14/2004 06:03 PMLumbering dinos hold all the VoIP chips
Preparing For The Future... Or Just
Clinging To The Past?
Preparing For The Future... Or Just
Clinging To The Past?
03/31/2005 02:52 PMIt's completely natural for companies in changing marketplaces to look
for ways to protect their existing cash cows -- but it makes for a
dangerous long term strategy. Here's another example from the
newspaper industry. While not everyone agrees that
newsp
rint is going away, all of the talk about
putti
ng up pay walls for the online versions of newspapers or
keepin
g certain content only in the print edition is all about trying to
artificially boost the appeal of the paper version in relation to the
digital version. That's backwards. As new studies are showing, many
in the younger generation of today
won't take a
newsprint subscription even if it's free. Not only do they
not find it an efficient way to get and read the news, they get upset
at the growing pile of newsprint in their homes. It makes them feel
guilty for not reading it. It's a psychological barrier that free
subscriptions and exclusive content will never get over. Instead,
news organizations should be working on ways to better attract users
to their digital editions, which means providing them what they want
-- not making it harder for them to get what they want.
Discounting IT's past while writing off
its future
Discounting IT's past while writing off
its future
05/02/2004 01:47 AMBoston Globe May 2 2004 5:02AM GMT
Exhibiting The House Of The Future From
The Past
Exhibiting The House Of The Future From
The Past
12/30/2004 07:55 PMNow that we're in predictions season, everyone knows that people will
be able to look back and laugh at many of the "long term" predictions
that people make, but sometimes people like to go back and commemorate
the missed predictions. Apparently, MIT is looking to set up an
exhibit in a few years looking at
the house of the future that they helped design in 1957. The
finished prototype was eventually displayed at Disneyland for a
decade, where it was supposed to represent a house in 1987. Of
course, most houses in 1987 look fairly similar to houses from 1957,
but it still must have seemed like a good idea at the time. Either
way, there is something amusing about setting up a "historical"
exhibit looking at a "house of the future" when that future, which
never actually made it, was supposed to occur years ago.
SVG's Past and Promising Future
SVG's Past and Promising Future
12/04/2002 08:22 PMIn this month's SVG column, Antoine Quint looks back at SVG's journey
through 2002 and looks forward to 2003.
In Past Tsunamis, Tantalizing Clues to
Future Ones
In Past Tsunamis, Tantalizing Clues to
Future Ones
01/04/2005 04:54 AMUndersea quakes are inevitable. The questions are where and when — and
the recent catastrophe may provide clues.
The Future of Free Software Lies in The
Past
The Future of Free Software Lies in The
Past
06/05/2005 11:43 PMFree Software Foundation lawyer Eben Moglen wants to wipe out what he
calls the
'scourge' of proprietary software.
COMMENT: Should computing past pave the
way for the future?
COMMENT: Should computing past pave the
way for the future?
01/02/2005 01:57 PMAll About Symbian Jan 2 2005 2:43PM GMT
The Past, Present and Future of Web
Services, part 1
The Past, Present and Future of Web
Services, part 1
09/30/2002 01:53 PMWeb services are somewhere around the crest of their hype cycle and
currently the darling of the prevalent media. This cresting is like
that of other technologies in that it precedes full development and
maturity. Web services, an undoubtedly important technology regardless
of media interest, have a good deal of development ahead of them.
Those who find success using Web services will be those who understand
the technology fundamentally: its motivations, the reasons why some
components are winning out over others, and the likely course of
maturity.
For this reason, I start with the history of Web services. This is no
mere nostalgic side-trip: the business and technical environment into
which Web services was conceived, and the various players that have
waxed and waned in prominence in their history to date are likely to
have a strong effect on the future of Web services. You can already
see this happening with developments such as the emerging role of
Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards
(OASIS) as incubator of security, workflow and transaction standards
for Web services. OASIS was once seen as the very opposition to
mainstream Web services. -- Uche Ogbuji
"zeldman.dogs"
Companies Browse the Past to Plan Their
Future
Companies Browse the Past to Plan Their
Future
05/21/2004 05:41 AMCompanies Browse the Past to Plan Their Futurehttp://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?
AID=/20040509/BUSINESS06/405090320As managing director
of consumer products consulting firm NewProductWorks -- and custodian
of "the collection" -- Marilyn Raymond is the keeper of the keys to a
vast trove of consumer marketing knowledge that inspires pilgrimages
by consumer products manufacturers eager to plumb the past for
tomorrow's next great idea. The private collection is an extraordinary
assortment of every new consumer food or health and beauty aid product
introduced in North America since the early 1970s. With its 80,000
items housed in a former Ferrari dealership in Ann Arbor, Mich., the
collection is a 30-year history of American business marketing
ingenuity, providing evidence of both brilliant marketing ideas and
spectacular flops. Remember Downeyflake's Toaster Eggs, or Gerber baby
food for adults? Giants like Procter & Gamble and tiny mom-and-pop
inventors all journey to Ann Arbor to view the collection, pick
through it for ideas, investigate possible patent infringement, and
aid their product research and development. Although the consulting
firm can't predict whether a new product will work, it can provide
examples of similar past products and explain why they succeeded or
failed. "Ninety percent of it is timing," Raymond says. Plus,
companies have to understand the American consumer psyche, she adds.
For example, one failed product, Fish Nuggets, was marketed in round
ice cream-type cartons. Consumers just couldn't stomach the fish and
ice cream connection.
Future of Illinois Farm May Lie in
Swampy Past
Future of Illinois Farm May Lie in
Swampy Past
09/27/2004 03:36 AMEnvironmentalists say they can return a 7,000-acre farm to its natural
state as a thriving wetland by allowing it to flood.
China's Past Offers No Guarantee of
Future Returns
China's Past Offers No Guarantee of
Future Returns
02/11/2004 07:54 AMTheStreet.com Feb 11 2004 12:32PM GMT
Go Digital How far do past visions of
the future match the present?
Go Digital How far do past visions of
the future match the present?
04/12/2004 11:37 AMBBC Apr 12 2004 3:46PM GMT
Symbian founder on mobile past, present
and future
Symbian founder on mobile past, present
and future
07/21/2004 01:11 PMExclusive Why Skype's a chimera and why the iPod is
great
Macworld Expo in Boston: Past, Present,
and Future (19-Jul-2004; 4.5K)
Macworld Expo in Boston: Past, Present,
and Future (19-Jul-2004; 4.5K)
07/19/2004 08:28 PMGo Digital: 1500 GMT / 160 BST How far
do past visions of the future match the
present?
Go Digital: 1500 GMT / 160 BST How far
do past visions of the future match the
present?
04/12/2004 07:37 AMBBC Apr 12 2004 11:56AM GMT
The danger of the past was that men
became slaves. The danger of the future
is that men may become robots. -- Erich
Fromm
The danger of the past was that men
became slaves. The danger of the future
is that men may become robots. -- Erich
Fromm
11/05/2003 10:53 AM The History of
Robots in the Victorian Era Out of the past
Out of the past
09/21/2004 08:50 AMI'm bored with my husband and son in New England. Should I go back to
my passionate lover in L.A.?
Getting a Date in the Past
Getting a Date in the Past
06/29/2004 05:07 PMSmallpox From The Past
Smallpox From The Past
12/27/2003 02:57 PMAn anonymous reader submits "Earlier this year, librarian Susanne Caro
was looking through an 1888 book on United States Civil War medicine
and discovered a ...
a blast from the past
a blast from the past
12/28/2004 05:29 PM
Miss Abigail's Time Warp
"old advice for contemporary dilemmas"...
Picturing the Past
Picturing the Past
12/07/2003 06:22 PM Under the City Sky, an exhibit of 8600 or more photographs of
Helsinki taken between 1969 and 1987 by...
Past Midsummer
Past Midsummer
06/27/2004 02:27 PMAte too much meat, drank too much alcohol, and met an surprisingly
large number of interesting people. (Thanks to everyone - especially
all the beautiful maidens on Friday - and apologies for being so
subdued most of the time. I really did enjoy myself, even if I didn't
always look the part. :)
I have the most distressing possible week coming up I can think of
(barring accidents). Why is work always so hectic around this time of
the year?
Perhaps I need a walkabout.
Something in me wants to just go.
I've flown too high on borrowed wings
Beyond the clouds and where the angels sings
In a sky containing no one but me
Up there's all empty and down there's the sea
No one here but me
There's nothing but light
That comes into sight
There's something up here that makes me wince
And I still got the feelings that I've felt ever since
I got to this place arrived at last
In front there's the future right back there's the past
Everything's moving so fast
There's nothing but light that comes into sight
The present like I've never seen it before
Is this the right place to stay
Please my wings fly me away.
-- Lene Marlin: Flown Away
Colors of the Past
Colors of the Past
12/27/2004 08:00 PM
Sergei
Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii took three b&w photos of his
subjects using red, green, and blue filters. Now, they've been
digitally composited, and we have
stunning
,
authentic color
photographs of
Russia
a> in the
early
1900's.
Digging Up the Past at 45 R.P.M.
Digging Up the Past at 45 R.P.M.
05/19/2004 06:04 PMDownloading digital music turns out to be a route into the realm of
memory.
Voices from the past
Voices from the past
07/26/2004 09:12 PM
Getting
back into the groove : In the corner of a California university
laboratory, two men are battling against time to perfect a machine
that will read old recordings - using special microscopes to scan the
grooves - and software that can convert those shapes into sound. Their
work could bring history to life.
A Jolt from the Past
A Jolt from the Past
06/18/2004 05:04 AMDon't let a lack of energy gum up the works. Jolt's caffeinated gum
can help you chew more than you bite off.
Voices of the past at a click
Voices of the past at a click
05/06/2004 09:41 PMChicago Tribune May 7 2004 2:21AM GMT
'X-ray software' uncovers the past
'X-ray software' uncovers the past
10/31/2003 04:58 AMBBC Oct 31 2003 4:10AM ET
Microsoft's blast from the past
Microsoft's blast from the past
08/12/2004 07:26 AMA year after the MSBlast worm, the software giant releases SP2 for
Windows XP. Would it have stopped the fast-spreading virus?
Placing a call to the past
Placing a call to the past
09/26/2004 09:16 AMChicago Tribune Sep 26 2004 12:20PM GMT
Packers Run Past Panthers 24-14 (AP)
Packers Run Past Panthers 24-14 (AP)
09/14/2004 12:14 AMAP - Ahman Green ran up, down and all over the defending NFC champion
Carolina Panthers.
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The Look Of The Future Past