McMaster is ending its dialin modem service as of May 2006. (See McMaster Dial-Up Internet Services.) It is the end of an era of connectivity. Not that I use it or know anyone who does. How many people still use modems, I wonder?
Category: History of Computing and Multimedia
Turntablism: Radical Phonograph Effects
Katz, in chapter 6 of Capturing Sound writes about “The Turntable as Weapon” and how DJs battle each other making music by scratching older records. The art has been called Turntablism and it is a radical example of how a “phonograph effect” where a recording technology like the phonograph has effects on that which is records. In the case of turntablism, the phonograph has the radical effect of becoming an instrument for new music to be performed. See also BBC: History of Vinyl.
Ironically on the djbattles.com site they have a PDF on how to transcribe turntable moves – a system for scoring and annotating what is supposed to be a live and combative art.
Western Union Telegram
Western Union, who have a long history providing telegraph services have discontinued the telegram as of January 27th.
Effective January 27, 2006, Western Union will discontinue all Telegram and Commercial Messaging services. We regret any inconvenience this may cause you, and we thank you for your loyal patronage.
The Globe and Mail carried a story today about this that I can’t find on their site. They changed their name to “Western Union” when they connected the Western (US) lines with the Eastern lines.
It can be argued that the conjunction of the telegraph and the daily newspaper had a more dramatic effect on global information than any other technology, including the internet. With these two readers, for the first time, would know more about world news than about their neighbors.
Passerini: Autobiography of a Generation
I have just finished Luisa Passerini‘s Autobiography of a Generation: Italy 1968, an extraordinary history of the half generation before me. Born in 59 I, like others who grew up in the late 70s, inherited, but didn’t participate in the political and cultural events of the 60s. We were the (half) generation after the movement of the counter culture. Reading Passerini has me thinking about what it was like following – how I benefited from the freedoms moved without experiencing what it was to be part of a movement. She follows those involved in 68 in Italy and the “diaspora” of directions they took from joining mainstream unions to the violence of terrorism. It seems the only real movements (as opposed to factions) to follow 68 were the feminist movement (and the US the gay/lesbian movement) – both movements that men could only support not move within.
Is it surprising that many of my generation of me would turn to computing? Computing had … still has, the transcendent rhetoric of a liberation movement along with the occaisional indulgence of drug culture. Computing offered a movement – a being part of something unique in history (or out of history). In addition it offered a certainty – things work or not, code runs or not – that the critical and ironic politics after 68 could not. Passerini comments on how many of the movers in 68 ended up in media criticism – their training in resisting traditional media and pamphleting prepared them to be critical and creative. I think a similar phenomenon happended over here – the experience of being pilloried in the press led many to become aware of mediation and to then become interested in the possibilities of computer mediation.
Continue reading Passerini: Autobiography of a Generation
Holy Mackarel Smackarel: when multimedia was black and white
The founders of Mackarel, David Groff and Kevin Steele, have created A Biased History of Interactive Media which has a great chapter on When multimedia was black and white which reminds me (an old HyperCard programmer) of the “good old days.” The chapter is a great little intro to early multimedia on the Mac. They mention a number of then new HyperCard stacks like Robert Winter’s CD Companion to Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony leading up to their Mackarel Stack, which I remember. The interface to the chapter is deliberately HyperCard-like.
Chapter 2 is about “When bevelled edges were cool” … remember those days? Shudder?
MLAgazine
The NEW MLAgazine: About Computers and the People Who Made Them is a strange magazine with long interesting articles on the historyof Netscape and a lot of stories about Macintosh history – including a good one on the history of the Mac OS. Looks to be the work mostly of one fan. I’m not sure what the title stands for or how it is a magazine, but the content is interesting.
First Cellular Phones
The Motorola DynaTAC 8000X was one of the first modern cellular phones. It was a brick, but consumers lined up for them in 1984. See the story at CNN.com – First modern cell phone was a true ‘brick’ – Apr 27, 2005.
More on Moore’s Law and the original magazine
Apparently there has been a search for a mint copy of the original 1965 Electronics magazine in which Moore’s article proposing Moore’s Law appeared. Well, now a copy has been found, see BBC NEWS | Technology | Moore’s Law original issue found. It was under the floorboards of a hoarder. (Why under the floorboards and how was it found? Because his wife complained about the mess!) Double thanks to Judith Altreuter for alerting me to this and then pointing out a typo.
Ritchie: Evolution of Unix Time-sharing system
I’m reading around the history of programming in Go To and was intrigued by the connection between Unix and time-sharing.
This connection is made explicitly in the title of a paper by one of the developers of Unix, Dennis M. Ritchie,
The Evolution of Unix Time-sharing System (PDF). As an interesting aside, the key proposal by the development group that got them a PDP-11 to work on proposed to develop a text editing system and their system ended up supporting the word processing of the patent group. Unix and Electronic Textuality! I knew it.
In early 1970 we proposed acquisition of a PDP-11, which had just been introduced by Digital. In some sense, this proposal was merely the latest in the series of attempts that had been made throughout the preceding year. It differed in two important ways. First, the amount of money (about $65,000) was an order of magnitude less than what we had previously asked; second, the charter sought was not merely to write some (unspecified) operating system, but instead to create a system specifically designed for editing and formatting text, what might today be called a `word-processing system.’ The impetus for the proposal came mainly from J. F. Ossanna, who was then and until the end of his life interested in text processing.
For more on Ossanna and the history of troff see The GNU Troff Manual – 2 Introduction.
Continue reading Ritchie: Evolution of Unix Time-sharing system
Gray’s Mostly Apple Movies
Thanks to StÈfan’s blog I discovered Gary L. Gray’s Some Cool QuickTime Movies page which has a number of historic clips like the original “1984” Macintosh commercial and Steve Jobs talking about the history of computing when introducing the Mac. (He makes it a question of freedom – freedom from the domination of IBM.)