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- <text id=90TT1522>
- <link 93HT0565>
- <title>
- June 11, 1990: Dashed Hopes And Bogus Fears
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 11, 1990 Scott Turow:Making Crime Pay
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TECHNOLOGY, Page 58
- Dashed Hopes and Bogus Fears
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Smithsonian chronicles an unpredictable information age
- </p>
- <p>By Eugene Linden
- </p>
- <p> At a time when data moved on horses and ships, Samuel Morse
- inaugurated the information age in 1835 by translating messages
- into electric signals and telegraphing them at nearly the speed
- of light. With 20/20 hindsight, it is tempting to view today's
- networked and digitized world as the inevitable culmination of
- Morse's breakthrough technology. That would be a mistake,
- however. Technological change has been marked by fits, starts
- and left turns, and the clues to the future have often been
- hidden in the clutter of the present.
- </p>
- <p> This is the message of a new $10 million permanent exhibit
- at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American
- History in Washington. Titled "Information Age: People,
- Information & Technology," the show brings together 700 objects
- and artifacts, ranging from Morse's telegraph to an early Apple
- computer. Through re-created scenes and videos, the exhibition
- tries to capture the mood of each period during the information
- age, which has repeatedly confounded both the hopes and fears
- of society. "Our goal was to display technology as a human
- enterprise," says curator David Allison, "subject to all the
- foibles and failures of people."
- </p>
- <p> In the early 1870s, Alexander Graham Bell and Elisha Gray
- both discovered the possibility of voice transmission, but Gray
- ignored the potential of the telephone in the erroneous belief
- that telegraphy would remain the dominant means of
- communication. In the early 1950s, technicians used the newly
- invented transistor simply as a substitute for bulky vacuum
- tubes. Only later did designers realize that the transistor
- could revolutionize electrical engineering by providing a tiny,
- universal electronic component that could be organized into
- integrated circuits and programmed to perform millions of
- different tasks.
- </p>
- <p> Predictions of the social impact of mass communications and
- computers were equally myopic. Bernard Finn, of the
- Smithsonian's division of electricity, notes that the sending
- of the first transatlantic cable message in 1858 was widely
- hailed as an event that would introduce an era of world peace
- because it would enhance communication between different
- peoples. Shortly afterward, the U.S. Civil War broke out, and
- the opposing armies took over telegraph offices, establishing
- a coupling between information technology and warfare that
- continues to the present.
- </p>
- <p> If the information age has not lived up to early hopes,
- neither has it justified later fears. Instead of mass
- unemployment, automation permitted the expansion of the economy
- and created new jobs. Abuse of the electronic media did not
- create the thought-controlled world predicted by George Orwell
- in 1984. Decades of attempts to control information in the
- Soviet Union backfired in the worst possible way: the
- government could not convince people they lived in a worker's
- paradise, but it could dampen the knowledge flow sufficiently
- to stifle the innovation necessary for a robust economy.
- </p>
- <p> Though sweeping, the actual transformations wrought by
- computers and mass communications have been more subtle than
- predicted. Between 1860 and 1980, the proportion of the U.S.
- economy derived from information processing and communications
- rose from 7% to more than 50%, creating a demand for a new type
- of worker. Computers and communications equipment do not
- require strength or aggressiveness, and this has helped
- transform the role of women in industrial societies. These
- changes go on today at the edges of the information age. In New
- Guinea, for example, rural men skilled in warfare and hunting
- are by turns mystified and mortified when they have to deal
- with women as equals if not superiors in modern banks and
- offices.
- </p>
- <p> In America computers and the media continue to reshape life.
- Still, the very ubiquity of information technologies has also
- exposed their limitations. Businesses and policymakers, awash
- in data and images, have discovered that information is not
- useful without expertise. With the most sophisticated
- intelligence-gathering tools at its disposal, the CIA could not
- accurately portray the disarray of the Soviet economy or
- predict the collapse of communism. Instead of making people
- redundant, the high-tech economy has only underscored the
- irreplaceable contributions of human knowledge and common
- sense.
- </p>
- <p> In recent years computer companies have begun to sell
- software systems that emulate specific human expertise, raising
- fears that experts will be the next group to be replaced by
- computers. But there is little reason for concern. Unfounded
- claims that an artificial intelligence is around the corner
- date to the 19th century. The more likely result is that these
- new systems will extend, rather than replace, human knowledge,
- freeing experts to work on novel problems.
- </p>
- <p> People will continue to err when predicting the future if
- only because of the human tendency to fit new events into
- familiar categories. In a celebrated 1950s experiment,
- psychologist Jerome Bruner showed that ordinary people would
- "see" a red ace of spades as a regular black one if it was
- salted into an otherwise normal deck. The Smithsonian exhibit
- demonstrates that inventors are fooled in the same way.
- </p>
- <p> Allison and his fellow curators have wisely refrained from
- predicting the future, focusing instead on the discoveries that
- have brought humanity to its present juncture. Perhaps, though,
- one of the many schoolchildren visiting the exhibit will look
- with fresh eyes at its displays and have the flash of intuition
- that holds the key to the next technological revolution.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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