I just offhandedly mentioned how it won't be too many years until we have the bandwidth and storage to constantly upload video from where ever we are, and the processing power to do some really amazing analysis on it. All of it, every single frame. Geocoded, timestamped, indexed, searchable, linked into a constantly evolving composite of reality. Available for the rest of human history.
15 years? 10 years? Maybe not even that.
10 years ago today I had just moved into the dorms, basically the only place in the world with a wired network and highspeed internet access. Seeing URLs in commercials was starting to seem normal and instant messaging had just been invented. The family had 2 cellphones -- one in my dad's truck, one the rest of us shared (and having that many was unusual). I wouldn't get my own for another 3 years. My brand new, completely tricked out going-away-to-college computer was 166Mhz with 3G of storage. It had a 28.8k modem, a 10Mbps ethernet card and it was just shy of the bleeding edge.
Goddamn but things are starting to get interesting. And happy 10 year Seattle anniversary to me.
15 years? 10 years? Maybe not even that.
10 years ago today I had just moved into the dorms, basically the only place in the world with a wired network and highspeed internet access. Seeing URLs in commercials was starting to seem normal and instant messaging had just been invented. The family had 2 cellphones -- one in my dad's truck, one the rest of us shared (and having that many was unusual). I wouldn't get my own for another 3 years. My brand new, completely tricked out going-away-to-college computer was 166Mhz with 3G of storage. It had a 28.8k modem, a 10Mbps ethernet card and it was just shy of the bleeding edge.
Goddamn but things are starting to get interesting. And happy 10 year Seattle anniversary to me.
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Er?
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The tech now available make me sometimes feel like a Sopwith Camel pilot sitting in the cockpit of a stealth bomber wondering which button to press.
*I managed to sell this to a suck^h^h^hNice young man in 1994 for $500. I didn't feel bad about that for much more than thirty seconds.
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Storage per buck is doubling roughly every year; that means that if you start recording now, you can keep doing it forever (until the curve levels off) for a total lifetime cost of twice the price of the first year. That's easy.
Wireless bandwidth, however, is not increasing nearly fast enough to keep up; its doubling time is several years. And if we keep adding users faster than we add channels, we'll never catch up. Sneakernet will continue to be the economical choice into the forseeable future. (Hint: with current SD cards, CPIP is faster than T1.)
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I'm going to take a middle ground on the "rest of human history." If something seems to have continued value, then it'll be kept alive, in some form or another. Most digital data won't be. Unfortunately.
(Though it's always possible the next 10-15 years will bring about major changes in electronic longevity. I've never been very good at predicting the future.)
Ten years ago I was starting high school, and didn't have my own email address. How life has changed.