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- <text id=93HT1440>
- <title>
- Man of Year 1982: The Computer
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Man of the Year
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 3, 1983
- Machine of the Year
- The Computer Moves In
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By the millions, it is beeping its way into offices, schools and homes
- </p>
- <p>By Otto Friedrich. Reported by Michael Mortiz/San Francisco,
- J. Madeleine Nash/Chicago and Peter Stoler/New York
- </p>
- <p> WILL SOMEONE PLEASE TELL ME, the bright red advertisement asks in
- mock irritation, WHAT A PERSONAL COMPUTER CAN DO? The ad provides not
- merely an answer, but 100 of them. A personal computer, it says, can
- send letters at the speed of light, diagnose a sick poodle, custom-
- tailor an insurance program in minutes, test recipes for beer.
- Testimonials abound. Michael Lamb of Tucson figured out how a personal
- computer could monitor anesthesia during surgery; the rock group Earth,
- Wind and Fire uses one to explode smoke bombs onstage during concerts;
- the Rev. Ron Jaenisch of Sunnyvale, Calif., programmed his machine so
- it can recite an entire wedding ceremony.
- </p>
- <p> In the cavernous Las Vegas Convention Center a month ago, more than
- 1,000 computer companies large and small were showing off their wares,
- their floppy discs and disc drives, joy sticks and modems, to a mob of
- some 50,000 buyers, middlemen and assorted technology buffs. Look!
- Here is Hewlett-Packard's HP9000, on which you can sketch a new
- airplane, say, and immediately see the results in 3-D through holograph
- imaging; here is how the Votan can answer and act on a telephone call
- in the middle of the night from a salesman on the other side of the
- country; here is the Olivetti M20 that entertains bystanders by drawing
- garishly colored pictures of Marilyn Monroe, here is a program designed
- by The Alien Group that enables an Atari computer to say aloud anything
- typed on its keyboard in any language. It also sings, in a buzzing
- humanoid voice, Amazing Grace and When I'm 64 or anything else that
- anyone wants to teach it.
- </p>
- <p> As both the Apple Computer advertisement and the Las Vegas circus
- indicate, the enduring American love affairs with the automobile and
- the television set are now being transformed into a giddy passion for
- the personal computer. This passion is partly fad, partly a sense of
- how life could be made better, partly a gigantic sales campaign. Above
- all, it is the end result of a technological revolution that has been
- in the making for four decades and is now, quite literally, hitting
- home.
- </p>
- <p> Americans are receptive to the revolution and optimistic about its
- impact. A new poll* for TIME by Yankelovich, Skelly and White
- indicates that nearly 80% of Americans expect that in the fairly near
- future, home computers will be a commonplace as television sets or
- dishwashers. Although they see dangers of unemployment and
- dehumanization, solid majorities feel that the computer revolution will
- ultimately raise production and therefore living standards (67%), and
- that it will improve the quality of their children's education (68%).
- </p>
- <p>[*The telephone survey of 1,019 registered voters was conducted on Dec.
- 8 and 9. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3%.]
- </p>
- <p> The sales figures are awesome and will become more so. In 1980 some
- two dozen firms sold 724,000 personal computers for $1.8 billion. The
- following year 20 more companies joined the stampede, including giant
- IBM, and sales doubled to 1.4 million units at just under $3 billion.
- When the final figures are in for 1982, according to Dataquest, a
- California research firm, more than 100 companies will probably have
- sold 2.8 million units for $4.9 billion.
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, the big, complex, costly "mainframe" computer has been
- playing an increasingly important role in practically everyone's life
- for the past quarter-century. It predicts the weather, processes
- checks, scrutinizes tax returns, guides intercontinental missiles and
- performs innumerable other operations for governments and corporations.
- The computer has made possible the exploration of space. It has
- changed the way wars are fought, as the Exocet missile proved in the
- South Atlantic and Israel's electronically sophisticated forces did in
- Lebanon.
- </p>
- <p> Despite its size, however, the mainframe does its work all but
- invisibly, behind the closed doors of a special, climate-controlled
- room. Now, thanks to the transistor and the silicon chip, the computer
- has been reduced so dramatically in both bulk and price that it is
- accessible to millions. In 1982 a cascade of computers beeped and
- blipped their way into the American office, the American school, the
- American home. The "information revolution" that futurists have long
- predicted has arrived, bringing with it the promise of dramatic changes
- in the way people live and work, perhaps even in the way they think.
- America will never be the same.
- </p>
- <p> In a larger perspective, the entire world will never be the same. The
- industrialized nations of the West are already scrambling to
- computerize (1982 sales: 435,000 in Japan, 392,000 in Western Europe).
- The effect of the machines on the Third World is more uncertain. Some
- experts argue that computers will, if anything, widen gap between haves
- and have-nots. But the prophets of high technology believe the
- computer is so cheap and so powerful that it could enable under-
- developed nations to bypass the whole industrial revolution. While
- robot factories could fill the need for manufactured goods, the
- microprocessor would create myriad new industries, and an international
- computer network could bring important agricultural and medical
- information to even the most remote villages. "What networks of
- railroads, highways and canals were in another age, networks of
- telecommunications, information and computerization...are today," says
- Austrian Chancellor Bruno Kreisky. Says French Editor Jean-Jacques
- Servan-Schreiber, who believes that the computer's teaching capability
- can conquer the Third World's illiteracy and even its tradition of high
- birth rates: "It is the source of new life that has been delivered to
- us."
- </p>
- <p> The year 1982 was filled with notable events around the globe. It was
- a year in which death finally pried loose Leonid Brezhnev's frozen grip
- on the Soviet Union, and Yuri Andropov, the cold-eyed ex-chief of the
- KGB, took command. It was a year in which Israel's truculent Prime
- Minister Menachem Begin completely redrew the power map of the Middle
- East by invading neighboring Lebanon and smashing the Palestinian
- guerrilla forces there. The military campaign was a success, but all
- the world looked with dismay at the thunder of Israeli bombs on
- Beirut's civilians and at the massacres in the Palestinian refugee
- camps. It was a year in which Argentina tested the decline of European
- power by seizing the Falkland Islands, only to see Britain, led by
- doughty Margaret Thatcher, meet the test by taking them back again.
- </p>
- <p> Nor did all of the year's major news derive from wars or the threat of
- international violence. Even as Ronald Reagan cheered the sharpest
- decline in the U.S. inflation rate in ten years, 1982 brought the worse
- unemployment since the Great Depression (12 million jobless) as well
- as budget deficits that may reach an unprecedented $180 billion in
- fiscal 1982. High unemployment plagued Western Europe as well, and the
- multibillion-dollar debts of more than two dozen nations gave
- international financiers a severe fright. It was also a year in which
- the first artificial heart began pumping life inside a dying man's
- chest, a year in which millions cheered the birth of cherubic Prince
- William Arthur Philip Louis of Britain, and millions more rooted for
- a wrinkled, turtle-like figure struggling to find its way home to outer
- space.
- </p>
- <p> There are some occasions, though, when the most significant force in
- a year's news is not a single individual but a process, and a
- widespread recognition by a whole society that this process is changing
- the course of all other processes. That is why, after weighing the ebb
- and flow of events around the world, TIME has decided that 1982 is the
- year of the computer. It would have been possible to single out as Man
- of the Year one of the engineers or entrepreneurs who masterminded this
- technological revolution, but no one person has clearly dominated those
- turbulent events. More important, such a selection would obscure the
- main point. TIME's Man of the Year for 1982, the greatest influence
- for good or evil, is not a man at all. It is a machine: the computer.
- </p>
- <p> It is easy enough to look at the world around us and conclude that the
- computer has not changed things all that drastically. But one can
- conclude from similar observations that the earth is flat, and that the
- sun circles it every 24 hours. Although everything seems much the same
- from one day to the next, changes under the surface of life's routines
- are actually occurring it almost unimaginable speed. Just 100 years
- ago, parts of New York City were lighted for the first time by a
- strange new force called electricity; just 100 years ago, the German
- Engineer Gottlieb Daimler began building a gasoline-fueled internal
- combustion engine (three more years passed before he fitted it to a
- bicycle). So it is with the computer.
- </p>
- <p> The first fully electronic digital computer built in the U.S. dates
- back only to the end of World War II. Created at the University of
- Pennsylvania. ENIAC weighed 30 tons and contained 18,000 vacuum tubes,
- which failed at an average of one every seven minutes. The arrival of
- the transistor and miniaturized circuit in the 1950s made it possible
- to reduce a room-size computer to a silicon chip the size of a pea.
- And prices kept dropping. In contract to the $487,000 paid for ENIAC,
- a top IBM personal computer today costs about $4,000, and some
- discounters offer a basic Timex-Sinclair 1000 for $77.95. One computer
- expert illustrates the trend by estimating that if the automobile
- business had developed like the computer business, a Rolls-Royce would
- now cost $2.75 and run 3 million miles on a gallon of gas.
- </p>
- <p> Looking ahead, the computer industry sees pure gold. There are 83
- million U.S. homes with TV sets, 54 million white-collar workers, 26
- million professionals, 4 million small businesses. Computer salesmen
- are hungrily eyeing every one of them. Estimates for the number of
- personal computers in use by the end of the century run as high as 80
- million. Then there are all the auxiliary industries: desks to hold
- computers, luggage to carry them, cleansers to polish them. "The
- surface is barely scratched," says Ulric Weil, an analyst for Morgan
- Stanley.
- </p>
- <p> Beyond the computer hardware lies the virtually limitless market for
- software, all those prerecorded programs that tell the willing but
- mindless computer what to do. These discs and cassettes range from
- John Wiley & Sons' investment analysis program for $59.95 (some run as
- high as $5,000) to Control Data's PLATO programs that teach Spanish or
- physics ($45 for the first lesson, $35 for succeeding ones) to a
- profusion of space wars, treasure hunts and other electronic games.
- </p>
- <p> This most visible aspect of the computer revolution, the video game,
- is its least significant. But even if the buzz and clang of the
- arcades is largely a teen-age fad, doomed to go the way of Rubik's Cube
- and the Hula Hoop, it is nonetheless a remarkable phenomenon. About
- 20 corporations are selling some 250 different game cassettes for
- roughly $2 billion this year. According to some estimates, more than
- half of all the personal computers bought for home use are devoted
- mainly to games.
- </p>
- <p> Computer enthusiasts argue that these games have educational value, by
- teaching logic, or vocabulary, or something. Some are even used for
- medical therapy. Probably the most important effect of these games,
- however, is that they have brought a form of the computer into millions
- of homes and convinced millions of people that it is both pleasant and
- easy to operate, what computer buffs call "user friendly." Games, says
- Philip D. Estridge, head of IBM's personal computer operations, "aid
- in the discovery process."
- </p>
- <p> Apart from games, the two things that the computer does best have wide
- implications but are quite basic. One is simply computation,
- manipulating thousands of numbers per second. The other is the ability
- to store, sort through and rapidly retrieve immense amounts of
- information. More than half of all employed Americans now earn their
- living not by producing things but as "knowledge workers," exchanging
- various kinds of information, and the personal computer stands ready
- to change how all of them do their jobs.
- </p>
- <p> Frank Herringer, a group vice president of Transamerica Corp.,
- installed an Apple in his suburban home in Lafayette, Calif., and spent
- a weekend analyzing various proposals for Transamerica's $300 million
- takeover of the New York insurance brokerage firm of Fred S. James Co.
- Inc. "It allowed me to get a good feel for the critical numbers," says
- Herringer. "I could work through alternative options, and there were
- no leaks."
- </p>
- <p> Terry Howard, 44, used to have a long commute to his job at a San
- Francisco stock brokerage, where all his work involved computer data
- and telephoning. With a personal computer, he set up his own firm at
- home in San Rafael. Instead of rising at 6 a.m. to drive to the city,
- he runs five miles before settling down to work. Says he: "It didn't
- make sense to spend two hours of every day burning up gas, when my
- customers on the telephone don't care whether I'm sitting at home or
- in a high rise in San Francisco."
- </p>
- <p> John Watkins, safety director at Harriet & Henderson Yarns, in
- Henderson, N.C., is one of 20 key employees whom the company helped to
- buy home computers and paid to get trained this year. Watkins is
- trying to design a program that will record and analyze all mill
- accidents: who was injured, how, when, why. Says he: "I keep track
- of all the cases that are referred to a doctor, but for every doctor
- case, there are 25 times as many first-aid cases that should be
- recorded." Meantime, he has designed a math program for his son Brent
- and is shopping for a work-processing program to help his wife Mary
- Edith write her master's thesis in psychology. Says he: "I don't know
- what it can't do. It's like asking yourself, `What's the most exciting
- thing you've ever done?' Well, I don't know because I haven't done it
- yet."
- </p>
- <p> Aaron Brown, a former defensive end for the Kansas City Chiefs and now
- an office-furniture salesman in Minneapolis, was converted to the
- computer by his son Sean, 15, who was converted at a summer course in
- computer math. "I thought of computers very much as toys," says Brown,
- "but Sean started telling me. `You could use a computer in your work.'
- I said, `Yeah, yeah, yeah.'" Three years ago, the family took a vote
- on whether to go to California for a vacation or to buy an Apple. The
- Apple won, 3 to 1, and to prove its value, Sean wrote his father a
- program that computes gross profits and commissions on any sale.
- </p>
- <p> Brown started with "simple things," like filing the names and telephone
- numbers of potential customers. "Say I was going to a particular area
- of the city," Brown says. "I would ask the computer to pull up the
- accounts in a certain zip-code area, or if I wanted all the customers
- who were interested in whole office systems, I could pull that up too."
- The payoff: since he started using the computer, he has doubled his
- annual sales to more than $1 million.
- </p>
- <p> Brown has spent about $1,500 on software, all bound in vinyl notebooks
- along a wall of his home in Golden Valley, Minn., but Sean still does
- a lot of programming on his won. He likes to demonstrate one that he
- designed to teach French. "Vive la France!" it says, and then starts
- beeping the first notes of La Marseillaise. His mother Reatha uses the
- computer to help her manage a gourmet cookware store, and even Sister
- Terri, who originally cast the family's lone vote against the computer,
- uses it to store her high school class notes. Says Brown: "It's
- become kind of like the bathroom. Is someone is using it, you wait
- your turn."
- </p>
- <p> Reatha Brown has been lobbying for a new carpet, but she is becoming
- resigned to the prospect that the family will acquire a new hard-disc
- drive instead. "The video-cassette recorder," she sighs, pointing
- across the room, "that was my other carpet." Replies her husband,
- setting forth an argument that is likely to be replayed in millions of
- household in the years just ahead: "We make money with the computer,
- but all we can do with a new carpet is walk on it. Somebody once said
- there were five reasons to spend money: on necessities, on
- investments, on self-improvement, on memories and to impress your
- friends. The carpet falls in that last category, but the computer
- falls in all five."
- </p>
- <p> By itself, the personal computer is a machine with formidable
- capabilities for tabulating, modeling or recording. Those capabilities
- can be multiplied almost indefinitely by plugging it into a network of
- other computers. This is generally done by attaching a desk-top model
- to a telephone line (two-way cables and earth satellites are coming
- increasingly into use). One can then dial an electronic data base,
- which not only provides all manner of information but also collects and
- transmits messages: electronic mail.
- </p>
- <p> The 1,450 data bases that now exist in the U.S. range from general
- information services like the Source, a Reader's Digest subsidiary in
- McLean, Va., which can provide stock prices, airline schedules or movie
- reviews, to more specialized services like the American Medical
- Association's AMA/NET, to real esoterica like the Hughes Rotary Rig
- Report. Fees vary from $300 an hour to less than $10.
- </p>
- <p> Just as the term personal computer can apply to both a home machine
- and an office machine (and indeed blurs the distinction between the
- two places) many of the first enthusiastic users of these devices have
- been people who do much of their work at home: doctors, lawyers, small
- businessmen, writers, engineers. Such people also have special needs
- for the networks of specialized data.
- </p>
- <p> Orthopedic Surgeon Jon Love, of Madisonville, Ky., connects the Apple
- in his home to both the AMA/NET, which offers, among other things,
- information on 1,500 different drugs, and Medline, a compendium of all
- medical articles published in the U.S. "One day I accessed the
- computer three times in twelve minutes," he says. "I needed
- information on arthritis and cancer in the leg. It saved me an hour
- and a half of reading time. I want it to pay me back every time I sit
- down at it."
- </p>
- <p> Charles Manly III practices law in Grinnell, Iowa (pop. 8,700) a town
- without a law library, so he pays $425 a month to connect his CPT work
- processor to Westlaw, a legal data base in St. Paul. Just now he needs
- precedents in an auto insurance case. He dials the Westlaw telephone
- number, identifies himself by code, then types: "Courts (Iowa)
- underinsurance." The computer promptly tells him there is only one
- such Iowa case, and it is 14 years old. Manly asks for a check on
- other Midwestern states, and it gives him a long list of precedents in
- Michigan and Minnesota. I'm not a chiphead," he says, "but if you
- don't keep up with the new developments, even in a rural general
- practice, you're not going to have the competitive edge."
- </p>
- <p> The personal computer and its networks are even changing that oldest
- of all home businesses, the family farm. Though only about 3% of
- commercial farmers and ranchers now have computers, that number is
- expected to rise to nearly 20% within the next five years. One who
- has grasped the true faith is Bob Johnson, who helps run his family's
- 2,800-acre pig farm near De Kalb, Ill. Outside, the winter's first
- snowflakes have dusted the low-slung roofs of the six red-and-white
- barns and the brown fields specked with corn stubble. Inside the two-
- room office building, Johnson slips a disc into his computer and types
- "D" (for dial) and a telephone number. He is immediately connected to
- the Illinois farm bureau's newly computerized AgriVisor service. It
- not only gives him weather conditions to the west and the latest hog
- prices on the Chicago commodities exchange, but also offers advice.
- Should farmers continue to postpone the sale of their newly harvested
- corn? "Remember," the computer counsels, "that holding on for a dime
- or a nickel may not be worth the long-term wait."
- </p>
- <p> Johnson started out playing computer games on an Apple II, but then
- "those got shoved in the file cabinet." He began computerizing all
- his farm records, which was not easy. "We could keep track of the hogs
- we sold in dollars, but we couldn't keep track of them by pounds and
- numbers at the same time." He started shopping around and finally
- acquired a $12,000 combination at a shop in Lafayette, Ind.: a
- microcomputer from California Computer Systems, a video screen from
- Ampex, a Diablo would printer and an array of agricultural programs.
- </p>
- <p> Johnson's computer now knows the yields on 35 test plots of corn, the
- breeding records of his 300 sows, how much feed his hogs have eaten
- (2,787,260 lbs.) and at what cost ($166,047.73). "This way, you can
- charge your hogs the cost of the feed when you sell them and figure
- out if you're making any money," says Johnson. "We never had this kind
- of information before. It would have taken too long to calculate. But
- we knew we needed it."
- </p>
- <p> Just as the computer is changing the way work is done in home offices,
- so it is revolutionizing the office. Routine tasks like managing
- payrolls and checking inventories have long since been turned over to
- computers, but now the typewriter is giving way to the work processor,
- and every office thus becomes part of a network. This change has
- barely begun: about 10% of the typewriters in the 500 largest
- industrial corporations have so far been replaced. But the economic
- imperatives are inescapable. All told, office professionals could save
- about 15% of their time if they used the technology now available, says
- a study by Booz, Allen & Hamilton, and that technology is constantly
- improving. In one survey of corporations, 55% said they were planning
- to acquire the latest equipment. This technology involves not just
- word processors but computerized electronic message systems that could
- eventually make paper obsolete, and wall-size, two-way TV
- teleconference screens that will obviate traveling to meetings.
- </p>
- <p> The standard home computer is sold only to somebody who wants one, but
- the same machine can seem menacing when it appears in an office.
- Secretaries are often suspicious of new equipment, particularly if it
- appears to threaten their jobs, and so are executives. Some senior
- officials resist using a keyboard on the ground that such work is
- demeaning. Two executives in a large firm reportedly refuse to read
- any computer print-out until their secretaries have retyped it into
- the form of a standard memo. "The biggest problem is introducing
- computers into an office is management itself," says Ted Stout of
- National Systems Inc., an office design firm in Atlanta. "They don't
- understand it, and they are scared to death of it."
- </p>
- <p> But there is an opposite fear that drives anxious executives toward
- the machines: the worry that younger and more sophisticated rivals
- will push ahead of them. "All you have to do," says Alexander
- Horniman, an industrial psychologist at the University of Virginia's
- Darden School of Business, "is walk down the hall and see people using
- the computer and imagine they have access to all sorts of information
- you don't." Argues Harold Todd, executive vice president at First
- Atlanta Bank: "Managers who do not have the ability to use a terminal
- within three to five years may become organizationally dysfunctional."
- That is to say, useless.
- </p>
- <p> If more and more offices do most of their work on computers, and if a
- personal computer can be put in a living room, why should anyone have
- to go to work in an office at all? The question can bring a stab of
- hope to anybody who spends hours every day on the San Diego Freeway or
- the Long Island Rail Road. Nor is "telecommuting" as unrealistic as
- it sounds. Futurist Jack Nilles of the University of Southern
- California has estimated that many home computer would soon pay for
- itself from savings in commuting expenses and in city office rentals.
- </p>
- <p> Is the great megalopolis, the marketplace of information, about to be
- doomed by the new technology? Another futurist, Alvin Toffler,
- suggests at least a trend in that direction. In his 1980 book, The
- Third Wave, he portrays a 21st century world in which the computer
- revolution has canceled out many of the fundamental changes wrought by
- the Industrial Revolution: the centralization and standardization of
- work in the factory, the office, the assembly line. These changes may
- seem eternal, but they are less than two centuries old. Instead,
- Toffler imagines a revived version of pre-industrial life in what he
- has named "the electronic cottage," a utopian abode where all members
- of the family work, learn and enjoy their leisure around the electronic
- hearth, the computer. Says Vice President Louis H. Mertes of the
- Continental Illinois Bank and Trust Co. of Chicago, who is such a
- computer enthusiast that he allows no paper to be seen in his office
- (though he does admit to keeping a few files in the drawer of an end
- table): "We're talking when--not if--the electronic cottage will
- emerge."
- </p>
- <p> Continental Illinois has experimented with such electronic
- cottages by providing half a dozen workers with word processors
- so they could stay at home. Control Data tried a similar
- experiment and ran into a problem: some of its 50 "alternate
- site workers" felt isolated, deprived of their social life
- around the water cooler. The company decided to ask them to the
- office for lunch and meetings every week. "People are like
- ants, they're communal creatures," say Dean Scheff, chairman and
- founder of CPT Corp., a word-processing firm near Minneapolis.
- "They need to interact to get the creative juices flowing. Very
- few of us are hermits."
- </p>
- <p> TIME's Yankelovich poll underlines the point. Some 73% of the
- respondents believed that the computer revolution would enable more
- people to work at home. But only 31% said they would prefer to do so
- themselves. Most work no longer involves a hayfield, a coal mine or
- a sweatshop, but a field for social intercourse. Psychologist Abraham
- Maslow defined work as a hierarchy of functions: it first provides
- food and shelter, the basics, but then it offers security, friendship,
- "belongingness." This is not just a matter of trading gossip in the
- corridors; work itself, particularly in the information industries,
- requires the stimulation of personal contact in the exchange of ideas:
- sometimes organized conferences, sometimes simply what is called "the
- schmooze factor." Says Sociologist Robert Schrank: "The workplace
- performs the function of community."
- </p>
- <p> But is this a basic psychological reality or simply another rut dug by
- the Industrial Revolution? Put another way, why do so many people make
- friends at the office rather than among their neighbors? Prophets of
- the electronic cottage predict that it will once again enable people
- to find community where they once did: in their communities.
- Continental Illinois Bank, for one, has opened a suburban "satellite
- work station" that gets employees out of the house but not all the way
- downtown. Ford, Atlantic Richfield and Merrill Lynch have found that
- teleconferencing can reach far more people for far less money than
- traditional sales conferences.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the obstacles, telecommuting seems particularly rich with
- promise for millions of women who feel tied to the home because of
- young children. Sarah Sue Hardinger has a son, 3, and a daughter three
- months old; the computer in her cream-colored stucco house in South
- Minneapolis is surrounded by children's books, laundry, a jar of
- Dippity Do. An experienced programmer at Control Data before she
- decided to have children, she now settles in at the computer right
- after breakfast, sometimes holding the baby in a sling. She starts by
- reading her computer mail, then sets to work converting a PLATO grammar
- program to a disc that will be compatible with Texas Instruments
- machines. "Mid-morning I have to start paying attention to the three-
- year-old, because he gets antsy," says Hardinger. "Then at 11:30 comes
- Sesame Street and Mr. Rogers, so that's when I usually get a whole lot
- done." When her husband, a building contractor, comes home and takes
- over the children, she returns to the computer. "I use part of my
- house time for work, part of my work time for the house," she says.
- "The baby has demand feeding, I have demand working."
- </p>
- <p> To the nation's 10 million physically handicapped, telecommuting
- encourages new hopes of earning a livelihood. A Chicago-area
- organization called Lift has taught computer programming to 50 people
- with such devastating afflictions as polio, cerebral palsy and spinal
- damage. Lift President Charles Schmidt cites a 46-year-old man
- paralyzed by polio: "He never held a job in his life until he entered
- our program three years ago, and now he's a programmer for Walgreens."
- </p>
- <p> Just as the vast powers of the personal computer can be vastly
- multiplied by plugging it into an information network, they can be
- extended in all directions by attaching the mechanical brain to sensors,
- mechanical arms and other robotic devices. Robots are already at work
- in a large variety of dull, dirty or dangerous jobs: painting
- automobiles on assembly lines and transporting containers of plutonium
- without being harmed by radiation. Because a computerized robot is so
- easy to reprogram, some experts foresee drastic changes in the way
- manufacturing work is done: toward customization, away from assembly-
- line standards. When the citizen of tomorrow wants a new suit, one
- futurist scenario suggests, his personal computer will take his
- measurements and pass them on to a robot that will cut his choice of
- cloth with a laser beam and provide him with a perfectly tailor
- garment. In the home too, computer enthusiasts delight in imagining
- machines performing the domestic chores. A little of that fantasy is
- already reality. New York City Real Estate Executive David Rose, for
- example, uses his Apple in business deals, to catalogue his 4,000 books
- and to write fund-raising letters to his Yale classmates. But he also
- uses it to wake him in the morning with soft music, turn on the TV,
- adjust the lights and make the coffee.
- </p>
- <p> In medicine, the computer, which started by keeping records and sending
- bills, now suggests diagnoses. CADUCEUS knows some 4,000 symptoms of
- more than 500 diseases: MYCIN specializes in infectious diseases:
- PUFF measures lung functions. All can be plugged into a master network
- called SUMEX-AIM, with headquarters at Standard in the West and Rutgers
- in the East. This may all sound like another step toward the
- disappearance of the friendly neighborhood G.P., but while it is
- possible that a family doctor would recognize 4,000 different symptoms.
- CADUCEUS is more likely to see patterns in what patients report and can
- then suggest a diagnosis. The process may sound dehumanized, but in
- one hospital where the computer specializes in peptic ulcers, a survey
- of patients showed that they found the machine "more friendly, polite,
- relaxing and comprehensible" than the average physician.
- </p>
- <p> The microcomputer is achieving dramatic effects on the ailing human
- body. These devices control the pacemakers implanted in victims of
- heart disease: they pump carefully measured quantities of insulin into
- the bodies of diabetics, they test blood samples for hundreds of
- different allergies; they translate sounds into vibrations that the
- deaf can "hear", they stimulate deadened muscles with electric impulses
- that may eventually enable the paralyzed to walk.
- </p>
- <p> In all the technologists' images of the future, however, there are
- elements of exaggeration and wishful thinking. Though the speed of
- change is extraordinary, so is the vastness of the landscape to be
- changed. New technologies have generally taken at least 20 years to
- establish themselves, which implied that a computer salesman's dream
- of a micro on every desk will not be fulfilled in the very near future.
- If ever.
- </p>
- <p> Certainly the personal computer is not without its flaws. As most new
- buyers soon learn, it is not that easy for a novice to use,
- particularly when the manuals contain instructions like this specimen
- from Apple: "This character prevents script from terminating the
- currently forming output line when it encounters the script command in
- the input stream."
- </p>
- <p> Another problem is that most personal computers end up costing
- considerable more than the ads imply. The $100 model does not really
- do very much, and the $1,000 version usually requires additional
- payments for the disc drive or the printer or the modem. Since there
- is very little standardization of parts among the dozens of new
- competitors, a buyer who has not done considerable homework is apt to
- find that the parts he needs do not fit the machine he bought.
- </p>
- <p> Software can be a major difficulty. The first computer buyers tended
- to be people who enjoyed playing with their machines and designing
- their own programs. But the more widely the computer spreads, the more
- it will have to be used by people who know no more about its inner
- workings than they do about the insides of their TV sets--and do not
- want to. They will depend entirely on the commercial programmers. Good
- programs are expensive both to make and to buy. Control Data has
- invested $900 million in its PLATO educational series and has not yet
- turned a profit, though its hopes run into the billions. A number of
- firms have marketed plenty of shoddy programs, but they are not cheap
- either. "Software is the new bandwagon, but only 20% of it is any
- good," say Diana Hestwood, a Minneapolis-based educational consultant.
- She inserts a math program and deliberately makes ten mistakes. The
- machine gives its illiterate verdict: "You taken ten guesses." Says
- Atari's chief scientist, Alan Kay: "Software is getting to be
- embarrassing."
- </p>
- <p> Many of the programs now being touted are hardly worth the cost, or
- hardly worth doing at all. Why should a computer be needed to balance
- a checkbook or to turn of the living-room lights? Or to recommend a
- dinner menu, particularly when it can consider (as did a $34 item
- called the Pizza Program) ice cream as an appetizer? Indeed, there are
- many people who may quite reasonably decide that they can get along
- very nicely without a computer. Even the most impressive information
- networks may provide the customer with nothing but a large telephone
- bill. "You cannot rely on being able to find what you want," says
- Atari's Kay. It's really more useful to go to a library."
- </p>
- <p> It is becoming increasingly evident that a fool assigned to work with
- a computer can conceal his own foolishness in the guise of high-tech
- authority. Lives there a single citizen who has not been commanded by
- a misguided computer to pay an income tax installment or department
- store bill that he has already paid?
- </p>
- <p> What is true for fools is no less true for criminals, who are now able
- to commit electronic larceny from the comfort of their living room.
- The probable champion is Stanley Mark Rifkin, a computer analyst in Los
- Angeles, who tricked the machines at the Security Pacific National Bank
- into giving him $10 million. While free on bail for that in 1979 (he
- was eventually sentenced to eight years), he was arrested for trying
- to steal $50 million from Union Bank (the charges were eventually
- dropped). According to Donn Parker, a specialist in computer abuse at
- SRI International (formerly the Stanford Research Institute), "Nobody
- seems to know exactly what computer crime is, how much of it there is,
- and whether it is increasing or decreasing. We do know that computers
- are changing the nature of business crime significantly."
- </p>
- <p> Even if all the technical and intellectual problems can be solved,
- there are major social problems inherent in the computer revolution.
- The most obvious is unemployment, since the basic purpose of commercial
- computerization is to get more work done by fewer people. One British
- study predicts that "automation-induced unemployment" in Western Europe
- could reach 16% in the next decade, but most analyses are more
- optimistic. The general rule seems to be that new technology
- eventually creates as many jobs as it destroys, and often more.
- "People who put in computers usually increase their staffs as well,"
- says CPT's Scheff. "Of course," he adds, "one industry may kill
- another industry. That's tough on some people."
- </p>
- <p> Theoretically, all unemployed workers can be retrained, but retraining
- programs are not high on the nation's agenda. Many new jobs, moreover,
- will require an aptitude in using computers, and the retraining needed
- to use them will have to be repeated as the technology keeps improving.
- Says a chilling report by the Congressional Office of Technology
- Assessments: "Lifelong retraining is expected to become the norm for
- many people." There is already considerable evidence that the school
- children now being educated in the use of computers are generally the
- children of the white middle class. Young blacks, whose unemployment
- rate stands today at 50%, will find another barrier in front of them.
- </p>
- <p> Such social problems are not the fault of the computer, of course, but
- a consequence of the way the American society might use the computer.
- "Even in the days of the big mainframe computers, they were a machine
- for the few," says Katherine Davis Fishman, author of The Computer
- Establishment. "It was tool to help the rich get richer. It still is
- to a large extent. One of the great values of the personal computer
- is that smaller concerns, smaller organizations can now have some of
- the advantages of the bigger organizations."
- </p>
- <p> How society uses its computers depends greatly on what kind of
- computers are made and sold, and that depends, in turn, on an industry
- in a state of chaotic growth. Even the name of the product is a matter
- of debate: "microcomputer" sounds too technical, but "home computer"
- does not fit an office machine. "Desktop" sounds awkward, and
- "personal computer" is at best a compromise. Innovators are pushing
- off in different directions. Hewlett Packard is experimenting with
- machines that respond to vocal commands; Osborne is leading a rush
- toward portable computers, ideally no larger than a book. And for
- every innovator, there are at least five imitators selling copies.
- </p>
- <p> There is much talk of a coming shakeout, and California Consultant
- David E. Gold predicts that perhaps no more than a dozen vendors will
- survive the next five years. At the moment, Dataquest estimates that
- Texas Instruments leads the low-price parade with a 35% share of the
- market in computers selling for less than $1,000. Next come Timex
- (26%), Commodore (15%) and Atari (13%). In the race among machines
- priced between $1,000 and $5,000, Apple still commands 26% followed by
- IBM (17% and Tandy/Radio Shack (10%). But IBM, which has dominated the
- mainframe computer market for decades, is coming on very strong.
- Apple, fighting back, will unveil its new Lisa model in January,
- putting great emphasis on user friendliness. The user will be able to
- carry out many functions simply by pointing to a picture of what he
- wants done rather than typing instructions. IBM is also reported to
- be planning to introduce new machines in 1983, as are Osborne and
- others.
- </p>
- <p> Just across the horizon, as usual, lurk the Japanese. During the
- 1970s, U.S. computer manufacturers complacently felt that they were
- somehow immune from the Japanese combination of engineering and
- salesmanship that kept gnawing at U.S. auto, steel and appliance
- industries. One reason was that the Japanese were developing their
- large domestic market. When they belatedly entered the U.S.
- battlefield, they concentrated not on selling whole systems but on
- particular sectors--with dramatic results. In low-speed printers using
- what is known as the dot-matrix method, the Japanese had only a 6%
- share of the market in 1980; in 1982, they provided half the 500,000
- such printers sold in the U.S. Says Computerland President Ed Faber:
- "About 75% of the dot-matrix printers we sell are Japanese, and almost
- all the monitors. There is no better quality electronics than what we
- see coming from Japan."
- </p>
- <p> Whatever its variations, there is an inevitability about the
- computerization of America. Commercial efficiency requires it, Big
- Government requires it, modern life requires it, and so it is coming
- to pass. But the essential element in this sense of inevitability is
- the way in which the young take to computers: not as just another
- obligation imposed by adult society but as a game, a pleasure, a tool,
- a system that fits naturally into their lives. Unlike anyone over 40,
- these children have grown up with TV screens; the computer is a screen
- that responds to them, hooked to a machine that can be programmed to
- respond the way they want it to. That is power.
- </p>
- <p> There are now more than 100,000 computers in U.S. schools, compared
- with 52,000 only 18 months ago. This is roughly one for every 400
- pupils. The richer and more progressive states do better. Minnesota
- leads with one computer for every 50 children and a locally produced
- collection of 700 software programs. To spread this development more
- evenly and open new doors for business. Apple has offered to donate
- one computer to every public school in the U.S.--a total of 80,000
- computers worth $200 million retail--if Washington will authorize a 25%
- tax write-off (as is done for donations of scientific equipment to
- colleges). Congress has so far failed to approve the idea, but
- California has agreed to a similar proposal.
- </p>
- <p> Many Americans concerned about the erosion of the schools put faith in
- the computer as a possible savior of their children's education, at
- school and at home. The Yankelovich poll showed that 57% thought
- personal computers would enable children to read and to do arithmetic
- better. Claims William Ridley, Control Data's vice president for
- education strategy: "If you want to improve youngsters one grade level
- in reading, our PLATO program with teacher supervision can do it up to
- four times faster and for 40% less expense than teachers alone."
- </p>
- <p> No less important than this kind of drill, which some critics compare
- with the old-fashioned flash cards, is the use of computers to teach
- children about computers. They like to learn programming, and they
- are good at it, often better than their teachers, even in the early
- grades. They treat it as play, a secret skill, unknown among many of
- their parents. They delight in cracking corporate security and
- filching financial secrets, inventing new games and playing them on
- military networks, inserting obscene jokes into other people's
- programs. In soberer versions that sort of skill will become a
- necessity in thousands of jobs opening up in the future. Beginning in
- 1986, Carnegie-Mellon University expects to require all of its students
- to have their own personal computers. "People are willing to spend a
- large amount of money to educate their children," says Author Fishman.
- "So they're all buying computers for Johnny to get a head start (though
- I have not heard anyone say, `I am buying a computer for Susie')."
- </p>
- <p> This transformation of the young raises a fundamental and sometimes
- menacing question: Will the computer change the very nature of human
- thought? And if so, for better or worse There has been much time
- wasted on the debate over whether computers can be made to think, as
- HAL seemed to be doing in 2001, when it murdered the astronauts who
- might challenge its command of the spaceflight. That answer is simple:
- computers do not think, but they do simulate many of the processes of
- the human brain: remembering, comparing, analyzing. And as people
- rely on the computer to do things that they used to do inside their
- heads, what happens to their heads?
- </p>
- <p> Will the computer's ability to do routine work mean that human thinking
- will shift to a higher level? Will IQs rise Will there be more
- intellectuals? The computer may make a lot of learning as unnecessary
- as memorizing the multiplication tables. But if a dictionary stored
- in the computer's memory can easily correct any spelling mistakes, what
- is the point of learning to spell? And if the mind is freed from
- intellectual routine, will it race off in pursuit of important ideas
- or lazily spend its time on more video games?
- </p>
- <p> Too little is known about how the mind works, and less about how the
- computer might change that process. The neurological researches of
- Mark Rosenzweig and his colleagues at Berkeley indicate that animals
- trained to learn and assimilate information develop heavier cerebral
- cortices, more glial cells and bigger nerve cells. But does the
- computer really stimulate the brain's activity or, by doing so much of
- its work, permit it to go slack?
- </p>
- <p> Some educators do believe they see the outlines for change. Seymour
- Papert, professor of mathematics and education at M.I.T. and author of
- Mindstorms: Children, Computers and Powerful Ideas, invented the
- computer language named Logo, with which children as young as six can
- program computers to design mathematical figures. Before they can do
- that, however, they must learn how to analyze a problem logically, step
- by step. "Getting a computer to do something," says Papert, "requires
- the underlying process to be described, on some level, with enough
- precision to be carried out by the machine." Charles P. Lecht,
- president of the New York consulting firm Lecht Scientific, argues that
- "what the lever was to the body, the computer system is to the mind."
- Says he: "Computers help teach kids to think. Beyond that, they
- motivate people to think. There is a great difference between
- intelligence and manipulative capacity. Computers help us to realize
- that difference."
- </p>
- <p> The argument that computers train minds to be logical makes some
- experts want to reach for the computer key that says ERASE. "The last
- thing you want to do is think more logically," says Atari's Kay. "The
- great think about computers is that they have no gravity systems. The
- logical system is one that you make up. Computers are a wonderful way
- of being bizarre."
- </p>
- <p> Sherry Turkle, a sociologist now finishing a book titled The Intimate
- Machine: Social and Cultural Studies of Computers and People, sees
- the prospect of change in terms of perceptions and feelings. Says she:
- "Children define what's special about people by contrasting them with
- their nearest neighbors, which have always been the animals. People
- are special because they know how to think. Now children who work with
- computers see the computer as their nearest neighbor, so they see that
- people are special because they feel. This may become much more
- central to the way people think about themselves. We may be moving
- toward a re-evaluation of what makes us human."
- </p>
- <p> For all such prophecies, M.I.T. Computer Professor Joseph Weizenbaum
- has answers ranging from disapproval to scorn. He has insisted that
- "giving children computers to play with...cannot touch...any real
- problem," and he has described the new computer generation as "bright
- young men of disheveled appearance [playing out] megalomaniacal
- fantasies of omnipotence."
- </p>
- <p> Weizenbaum's basic objection to the computer enthusiasts is that they
- have no sense of limits. Says he: "The assertion that all human
- knowledge is encodable in streams of zeros and ones--philosophically,
- that's very hard to swallow. In effect, the whole world is made to
- seem computable. This generates a kind of tunnel vision, where the
- only problems that seem legitimate are problems that can be put on a
- computer. There is a whole world of real problems, of human problems,
- which is essentially ignored."
- </p>
- <p> So the revolution has begun, and as usually happens with revolutions,
- nobody can agree on where it is going or how it will end. Nils
- Nilsson, director of the Artificial Intelligence Center at SRI
- International, believes the personal computer, like television, can
- "greatly increase the forces of both good and evil." Marvin Minsky,
- another of M.I.T.'s computer experts, believes the key significance of
- the personal computer is not the establishment of an intellectual
- ruling class, as some fear, but rather a kind of democratization of
- the new technology. Says he: "The desktop revolution has brought the
- tools that only professionals have had into the hands of the public.
- God knows what will happen now."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the revolution will fulfill itself only when people no longer
- see anything unusual in the brave New World, when they see their
- computer not as a fearsome challenger to their intelligence but as a
- useful linkup of some everyday gadgets: the calculator, the TV and
- the typewriter. Or as Osborne's Adam Osborne puts it: "The future
- lies in designing and selling computers that people don't realize are
- computers at all."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-