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You know ....its hard to see sometimes, but this place is pretty amazing.

We can fight, connect, love, hate, and annoy .....people from all around the world.... realtime.

I remember watching my mum wow out over watching televsion on a 4 inch screen in a box in bed ....30 years ago .....and her exclamation at it .

Now its in our hand, 24/7.....tv, music, radio, conversation and more.

2 generwtions of now take it for granted.
But go back two more ...and this is sci- fi shit.

Its pretty cool really🤗
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KiwiBird · 36-40, F
I was getting very worried about you....all prim and proper like no spelling mistakes and reasonable grammar until

generwtions

Then I relaxed....all is right with the world.
@Ontheroad Awe ....thankyoj 🤗

its funny ....i delete more than i post🙄

I have something like 60 drafts idylly collecting virtual dust....which i add to with more cognitive spillage, and then delete others when i relfect on how downright stoopid theu are 😣

In truth, im very selfish here .... it's all me, me, me.
(Like we all are really🤷‍♀️).
But i like having a mental overflow tank.

Theres very few people in my RL, that swim in the same waters as me.
So although i have all this stuff in my head, amd stuff im interested in - it means nothing to those around me on a daily basis. While they are watching tictoks, im researching why do eels have no legs?🤷‍♀️

I don't get what they do, and they dont get wjat i do. Its all rather odd🤷‍♀️
Ontheroad · M
@OogieBoogie I'm always thinking "she is holding back and I'd love to sit and listen to her really let it go".

I do that too, mainly because I have so many thoughts on a certain thing that my comments would go on and on creating a text wall that would either be misunderstood or not read at all... or read and be locked up at the funny farm😁
@Ontheroad Hahahahaha😂

*Relates*✌️😅
ABCDEF7 · M
The man who made it possible for you to read this page, Tim Berners-Lee, a programmer at the physics laboratory CERN who invented the World Wide Web, never receive the Nobel Prize. But he was awarded the A.M. Turing Award, often regarded as the Nobel Prize of computing. This prestigious honor is given by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) and recognizes individuals who have made lasting contributions of major technical importance to the computing field.

In an interesting interview at MIT in 2017 he talked about his invention’s past, present, and future and answered three interesting questions beautifully.


Take us back to 1989. What was the problem you were setting out to solve when you started this work that led to the World Wide Web?
I was working at CERN and I was frustrated because people had brought along all kinds of wonderful computers—all different. Each would have some way of keeping track of documents and manuals and help files but they were all different as well. I felt, wouldn't it be wonderful if all of these systems could be somehow part of or considered part of one big meta-system?

The first thing we did was start a Web server at CERN for the phone book. It [previously] ran on a mainframe, which was a pain to have to log in to, and a lot of people just logged on to the mainframe to look up people’s phone numbers. The phone book got a few people to install a Web browser. It spread outside CERN in high-energy physics, and then ended up taking off exponentially.


The Web now feels indispensable, and is part of many people’s daily personal and professional life. What still needs working on?
Now we have to talk about it as a human right. It’s not as basic as water, but the difference in economic and social power between someone who has it and someone who doesn’t means they’re massively disadvantaged. If you're in a village in Africa and you don't have access because you can't afford it, or you do have access and you can't use it because you're not literate, then this is a problem.

When we started the World Wide Web foundation [in 2009] we started pointing out that if 20 percent of the world has it, they owe the other 80 percent to try and get them connected as quickly as possible. [The UN said last November that 47 percent of the world’s population is now online.]



Looking ahead, you have spoken about the need for the Web to be “re-decentralized.” And you’re part of a community working on technology intended to do that. What’s the thinking behind this movement?
In the late ‘90s there was a massive excitement about what an incredibly empowering system this is, and de-centralization was an important part of that. Without asking anybody else, I could get a computer, put some software on it, plug it into the Internet, and I’d have a blog and a voice. People thought those voices would mount up and provide really exciting things. We have got great things like Wikipedia and crowdfunding, but a lot of people spend all their time in social network silos. A social network is disempowering because you put a lot of energy into it, all your personal data out there, and tell it who your friends are. You can only use that information inside the silo of that particular social network.

We had a few workshops, and we've got people working in the lab on things like Solid project at MIT, which is saying we could go to a world where everybody is in charge of their own data. Imagine if all the applications that you run point at data you control. That is an exciting new mode of operating.
@ABCDEF7 that was really interesting.

Im not a techy type person - i fumble around the web in a very clumsy manner, and you dont wanna see how much housekeeping is missing from my devices.
I envy people like this guy, who can see it from such a broad perspective.

But gosh im grateful for them.
Everyday....i bumble onto some new and fascinating fact or creation. I love it.
sarabee1995 · 31-35, F
@ABCDEF7 Decentralization is really important. He just scratches the surface of the reasoning here but it's something we all need to pay attention to and ensure it gets more traction.
ABCDEF7 · M
@sarabee1995 Yes. We can see, if it's Google or Meta, both are making lots of profits just by buying your time and information for free.
Stephie · 22-25, F
Except that 30 years ago spammers and trolls were terms that may only have been associated with either meat factory workers and woods inhabitants of the forests of Norway.

Thirty years ago, kids played with each other outside in the backyards rather than behind a screen shooting at each other in a virtual world and have lost every real face to face connections.

Thirty years ago, people knew how to spell, did not use onomatopoeia, abbreviations and other cryptic terms that require a university degree to understand.
Stephie · 22-25, F
@OogieBoogie Yes, this is so true.

I make it a point to type out all my texts using a keyboard. I never use voice command because I intend to keep my skills with grammar, sentence construction and a basic vocabulary.

I am worried about and for our future generations and their integration in society. They are the ones that will eventually rule nations and multinationals but at what cost for knowledge. Will we be doomed to lose our ability to talk with each other? Will we forget how to communicate in a concise manner or is there a new chance to have a multinational and common way of expressing ourselves that breaks the communication barriers that mankind put up in the past millennia?
Stephie · 22-25, F
@OogieBoogie I forgot to mention it but I like the art in your picture portfolios. Very nice drawings.
@Stephie oh thank you so much 🤗
Yeah, i art about here and there when the whim takes me.
I was once a graphic artist way back - but it was a very much a 'creative vampire' to my artsy nature....so i gave it up.

But thankyou . I really like when people enjoy my art.....not many appreciate my artsy side in RL.
Matt85 · 36-40, M
its pretty amazing
and the fact we do all this over a wireless connection, your words are being beamed to my computer through the air
Civilization can really be amazing
apart from when its not
@Matt85 well yeah....it can be shite.

But hopefully itll evolve with humanity.

One day it might be phenomenal 🤗
Matt85 · 36-40, M
@OogieBoogie We are definitely learning a lot from the internet.
@Matt85 well.......some of us are 😉
bookerdana · M
I've always noted that you never make gratuitous attacks on SW....it might be as true for the internet. But you're right
@bookerdana oh i have done....years ago🙄

But i hope ive grown.
I mean....im still pretty pissed at the tiny piece of feed i get. I miss thr old feed so much ☹️.

But then, itd be worse if there was no feed at all, no SW. So im not going to shit on something i use , that i could NEVER build myself .
bookerdana · M
@OogieBoogie Ah,yer a superhero with a twist
🦸

Sorry no Super woman emoji
Ontheroad · M
I think so too, just wish more participated.
@Ontheroad well..... they do.

We just dont currently see them due to a very tight algorithm.

When its fixed ....itll be so much better🤗
jehova · 36-40, M
Yes it nice to step back and appreciate life sometimes.
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sarabee1995 · 31-35, F
Agree 100%. It's the reason I stay. :)
DDonde · 31-35, M
I remember my mind being blown when I was younger that I could talk with people from across the world. It is pretty crazy
@DDonde what blows me out is the immediacy of information: i can read a study, by someone in Scandinavia, published a month ago, that not even my doctor knows about.
I can follow specialists on their journey of knowledge, who share ehat they find, fix and adapt theories and discoveries as they go. They do all the work , and i get the benefit if what they find out...week by week.

I get to gorge on any subject i want, whenever i want.
Its brilliant.🤗

 
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