tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3665333919884629248.post5474095812449259012..comments2023-06-26T01:56:43.751+10:00Comments on Plato's Revenge: Why everyone should get a degree in IT.Hein Boumanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09543110818680861065noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3665333919884629248.post-86680296978913970852010-03-29T15:09:31.908+11:002010-03-29T15:09:31.908+11:00I think this is the best one yet! I particularly l...I think this is the best one yet! I particularly like the vignette about files.<br /><br />I am reading a book right now called ‘You Are Not a Gadget’ by Jaron Lanier and he goes hard too on the file/folder idea.Here is a hilite I excerpted reading on the weekend on my Kindle.<br /><br />Your highlight and note at location 246<br />Entrenched Software Philosophies Become Invisible Through Ubiquity An even deeper locked-in idea is the notion of the file. Once upon a time, not too long ago, plenty of computer scientists thought the idea of the file was not so great. The first design for something like the World Wide Web, Ted Nelson’s Xanadu, conceived of one giant, global file, for instance. The first iteration of the Macintosh, which never shipped, didn’t have files. Instead, the whole of a user’s productivity accumulated in one big structure, sort of like a singular personal web page. Steve Jobs took the Mac project over from the fellow who started it, the late Jef Raskin, and soon files appeared. UNIX had files; the Mac as it shipped had files; Windows had files. Files are now part of life; we teach the idea of a file to computer science students as if it were part of nature. In fact, our conception of files may be more persistent than our ideas about nature. I can imagine that someday physicists might tell us that it is time to stop believing in photons, because they have discovered a better way to think about light—but the file will likely live on. The file is a set of philosophical ideas made into eternal flesh. The ideas expressed by the file include the notion that human expression comes in severable chunks that can be organized as leaves on an abstract tree— and that the chunks have versions and need to be matched to compatible applications. What do files mean to the future of human expression? This is a harder question to answer than the question “How does the English language influence the thoughts of native English speakers?” At least you can compare English speakers to Chinese speakers, but files are universal. The idea of the file has become so big that we are unable to conceive of a frame large enough to fit around it in order to assess it empirically.<br /><br />I believe you are correct on the notes about the Cloud. Perhaps this will make for another blog post.<br /><br />It is interesting - we often speak about data format standards or technology protocols but rarely do we see 'standards' in the space of interface design. It seems the norm here is 'make as unique and cutting edge of an interface as possible so your site looks cooler than the next guys' and 'to heck with the users'.<br /><br />pgthatsthathttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15615078654426545877noreply@blogger.com