home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!nycmny1-snh1.gtei.net!news.gtei.net!news-out.visi.com!hermes.visi.com!newsxfer.interpacket.net!newsfeed.zip.com.au!news.uwa.edu.au!news1.optus.net.au!optus!spool01.syd.optusnet.com.au!spool.optusnet.com.au!210.49.20.118.MISMATCH!not-for-mail
- From: xanni@xanadu.com.au (Andrew Pam)
- Newsgroups: alt.cyberspace,alt.hypertext,alt.internet.services,comp.groupware,comp.infosystems,comp.infosystems.hyperg,comp.infosystems.interpedia,alt.answers,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Xanadu World Publishing Repository Frequently Asked Questions
- Followup-To: comp.infosystems
- Date: 25 Jan 2002 15:45:23 +1100
- Organization: Xanadu Australia
- Sender: xanni@kira.glasswings.com.au
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Expires: Wed, 1 Jan 2003 00:00:00 UTC
- Message-ID: <a2qnt3$k3i$1@kira.glasswings.com.au>
- Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked Questions (and their answers) about the Xanadu(tm) World Publishing Repository(tm) project.
- Keywords: Xanadu Distributed Hypermedia Publishing Repository
- Lines: 659
- NNTP-Posting-Host: 203.164.127.5
- X-Trace: 1011933582 23775 203.164.127.5
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.cyberspace:43387 alt.hypertext:18352 alt.internet.services:139992 comp.groupware:13046 comp.infosystems:13627 comp.infosystems.hyperg:3826 comp.infosystems.interpedia:1388 alt.answers:60086 comp.answers:48644 news.answers:223488
-
- Archive-name: xanadu-faq
- Last-modified: 2002/01/25
- Version: 1.55
- Copyright: (c) 1994-2002 Xanadu Australia
- URL: http://www.xanadu.com.au/general/faq.html
-
- Xanadu FAQ
- ==========
-
- This document contains information about the Xanadu Project which
- may be of interest to the general public and readers of the xanews
- mailing list. It is currently maintained by xanni@xanadu.com.au
- (Andrew Pam) of Xanadu Australia and posted approximately monthly.
-
- This document is copyright (c) 1994-2002 Xanadu Australia and may
- be freely distributed in any media providing it is not modified in
- any way and no fee is charged either for this document or for any
- composite work in which it is included.
-
- This FAQ and other Xanadu information are also available at
- http://www.xanadu.com.au/xanadu/.
-
- Questions in this document are numbered, and answers are labelled
- with letters of the alphabet. Thus 1 is the first question, and
- 1a is the first answer to the first question. Suggestions for
- additions, corrections and expansion of the material in this
- document are welcomed.
-
-
- Contents
- --------
-
- 1 What is Xanadu?
- 2 What requirements do Xanadu systems aim to meet?
- 3 What software meets some of the Xanadu requirements?
- 4 What is the history of the Xanadu system?
- 5 How can I contact Project Xanadu?
- 6 What Xanadu-related merchandise is currently available?
- 7 What is the history of the name "Xanadu"?
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
-
- 1 What is Xanadu?
- -----------------
-
-
- 1a
-
- Xanadu is a trade and service mark of Project Xanadu for computer
- software and services for electronic publishing and media
- manipulation. See question 5 below for Project Xanadu contact
- details.
-
-
- 1b
-
- Xanadu is the original hypertext and interactive multimedia
- system, under continuous development since 1960. See question 4
- below for the history of the Xanadu system.
-
-
- 1c
-
- Xanadu is an overall paradigm - an ideal and general model for all
- computer use, based on sideways connections among documents and
- files. This paradigm is especially concerned with electronic
- publishing, but also extends to all forms of storing, presenting
- and working with information. It is a unifying system of order
- for all information, non-hierarchical and side-linking, including
- electronic publishing, personal work, organisation of files,
- corporate work and groupware.
-
- All data (for instance, paragraphs of a text document) may be
- connected sideways and out of sequence to other data (for
- instance, paragraphs of another text document). This requires new
- forms of storage, and invites new forms of presentation to show
- these connections.
-
- On a small scale, the paradigm means a model of word processing
- where comments, outlines and other notes may be stored
- conceptually adjacent to a document, linked to it sideways. On a
- large scale, the paradigm means a model of publishing where anyone
- may quote from and publish links to any already-published
- document, and any reader may follow these links to and from the
- document.
-
-
- 1d
-
- Xanadu is an ideal of open electronic publishing based on the
- paradigm mentioned in answer 1c above. It is intended to be
- especially free and fair, where all authors and readers are
- considered equal. It is a complete business system for electronic
- publishing based on this ideal with a win-win set of arrangements,
- contracts and software for the sale of copyrighted material in
- large and small amounts. It is a planned world-wide publishing
- network based on this business system. It is optimised for a
- point-and-click universe, where users jump from document to
- document, following links and buying small pieces as they go.
-
-
- 1e
-
- The Xanadu Australia formal problem definition is:
-
- We need a way for people to store information not as individual
- "files" but as a connected literature. It must be possible to
- create, access and manipulate this literature of richly formatted
- and connected information cheaply, reliably and securely from
- anywhere in the world. Documents must remain accessible
- indefinitely, safe from any kind of loss, damage, modification,
- censorship or removal except by the owner. It must be impossible
- to falsify ownership or track individual readers of any document.
-
- This system of literature (the "Xanadu Docuverse") must allow
- people to create virtual copies ("transclusions") of any existing
- collection of information in the system **regardless of
- ownership**. In order to make this possible, the system must
- guarantee that the owner of any information will be paid their
- chosen royalties on any portions of their documents, no matter how
- small, whenever and wherever they are used.
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
-
- 2 What requirements do Xanadu systems aim to meet?
- --------------------------------------------------
-
-
- 2a
-
- Every Xanadu server is uniquely and securely identified.
-
-
- 2b
-
- Every Xanadu server can be operated independently or in a network.
-
-
- 2c
-
- Every user is uniquely and securely identified.
-
-
- 2d
-
- Every user can search, retrieve, create and store documents.
-
-
- 2e
-
- Every document can consist of any number of parts each of which
- may be of any data type.
-
-
- 2f
-
- Every document can contain links of any type including virtual
- copies ("transclusions") to any other document in the system
- accessible to its owner.
-
-
- 2g
-
- Links are visible and can be followed from all endpoints.
-
-
- 2h
-
- Permission to link to a document is explicitly granted by the act
- of publication.
-
-
- 2i
-
- Every document can contain a royalty mechanism at any desired
- degree of granularity to ensure payment on any portion accessed,
- including virtual copies ("transclusions") of all or part of the
- document.
-
-
- 2j
-
- Every document is uniquely and securely identified.
-
-
- 2k
-
- Every document can have secure access controls.
-
-
- 2l
-
- Every document can be rapidly searched, stored and retrieved
- without user knowledge of where it is physically stored.
-
-
- 2m
-
- Every document is automatically moved to physical storage
- appropriate to its frequency of access from any given location.
-
-
- 2n
-
- Every document is automatically stored redundantly to maintain
- availability even in case of a disaster.
-
-
- 2o
-
- Every Xanadu service provider can charge their users at any rate
- they choose for the storage, retrieval and publishing of
- documents.
-
-
- 2p
-
- Every transaction is secure and auditable only by the parties to
- that transaction.
-
-
- 2q
-
- The Xanadu client-server communication protocol is an openly
- published standard. Third-party software development and
- integration is encouraged.
- ____________________________________________________________
-
-
-
- 3 What software meets some of the Xanadu requirements?
- ------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- 3a
-
- The World Wide Web (also called WWW or simply the Web) was
- partially inspired by the Xanadu ideas and supports requirements
- 2a-2e, 2k-2l and 2q. The XHTML standards additionally support
- requirement 2f.
-
-
- 3b
-
- HyperWave (also known as Hyper-G) is based on the Xanadu ideas and
- supports requirements 2a-2e, 2g-2h, 2j-2l and 2q.
-
-
- 3c
-
- Microcosm has also been influenced by the Xanadu ideas and
- supports requirements 2d, 2g and 2j. "Webcosm" additionally
- supports requirement 2b.
-
-
- 3d
-
- Lotus Notes (now owned by IBM, and integrated with the Web under
- the name Domino) was also influenced by the Xanadu ideas.
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
-
- 4 What is the history of the Xanadu system?
- -------------------------------------------
-
- Ted Nelson thought up the whole thing in 1960, and has been
- speaking and publishing about the idea since 1965. In that year
- he also coined the terms "hypertext" and "hypermedia" for
- non-sequential writings and branching presentations of all types.
- (The term "interactive multimedia" seems to have become popular
- recently.)
-
- Since that time there have been a long series of changing designs
- embodying these ideas:
-
- 1960:
- Nelson's designs showed two screen windows connected by visible
- lines, pointing from parts of an object in one window to
- corresponding parts of an object in another window. No existing
- windowing software provides this facility even today.
-
- 1965:
- Nelson's design concentrated on the single-user system and was
- based on "zipper lists", sequential lists of elements which could
- be linked sideways to other zipper lists for large non-sequential
- text structures.
-
- 1970:
- Nelson invented certain data structures and algorithms called the
- "enfilade" which became the basis for much later work (proprietary
- to Xanadu Operating Company, Inc. until 24 August 1999)
-
- 1972:
- Implementations ran in both Algol and Fortran.
-
- 1974:
- William Barus extended the enfilade concept to handle
- interconnection.
-
- 1979:
- Nelson assembled a new team (Roger Gregory, Mark Miller, Stuart
- Greene, Roland King and Eric Hill) to redesign the system.
-
- 1981:
- K. Eric Drexler created a new data structure and algorithms for
- complex versioning and connection management.
-
- The Project Xanadu team completed the design of a universal
- networking server for Xanadu, described in various editions of Ted
- Nelson's book "Literary Machines" (see answers 6a and 6b below).
-
- 1983:
- Xanadu Operating Company, Inc. (XOC, Inc.) was formed to complete
- development of the 1981 design.
-
- 1988:
- XOC, Inc. was acquired by Autodesk, Inc. and amply funded, with
- offices in Palo Alto and later Mountainview California. Work
- continued with Mark Miller as chief designer.
-
- The 1981 design (now called Xanadu 88.1) was topped off but Miller
- began a redesign. Xanadu 88.1 was not subjected to quality
- control or released as a product.
-
- Dean Tribble and Ravi Pandya became co-designers and work on the
- redesign continued.
-
- 1989:
- The World Wide Web, Hyper-G and Microcosm projects are initiated,
- all inspired or influenced by the Xanadu ideas.
-
- 1992:
- Autodesk entered into the throes of an organisational shakeup and
- dropped the project, after expenditures on the order of five
- million US dollars. Rights to continued development of the XOC
- server were licensed to Memex, Inc. of Palo Alto, California and
- the trademark "Xanadu" was re-assigned to Nelson.
-
- 1993:
- Nelson re-thought the whole thing and respecified Xanadu
- publishing as a system of business arrangements. Minimal
- specifications for a publishing system were created under the name
- "Xanadu Light", and Andrew Pam of Serious Cybernetics in
- Melbourne, Australia was licensed to continue development as
- Xanadu Australia.
-
- 1994:
- Nelson was invited to Japan and founded the Sapporo HyperLab.
- Memex changed their name to Filoli. SenseMedia became the second
- Xanadu licensee under the name of "Xanadu America".
-
- 1996:
- Nelson became a Professor of Environmental Information at the
- Shonan Fujisawa Campus of Keio University. Initial draft of text
- transclusion proposal released.
-
- 1997:
- Initial draft of OSMIC specifications released. Internet-Draft on
- Fine-grained Transclusion in HTML released. Transpublishing and
- transcopyright start to be used on the Web.
-
- 1998:
- Nelson received his first award for his work on Xanadu and
- hypermedia, the 1998 Yuri Rubinsky Insight Foundation lifetime
- achievement award.
-
- 1999:
- Open Source release of Xanadu 88.1 and 92.1 code under the names
- Udanax Green and Udanax Gold respectively.
-
- 2001:
- Nelson awarded the medal and title of "Officier des Arts et
- Lettres" by the French Minister of Culture for his work on Xanadu
- and hypermedia.
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
-
- 5 How can I contact Project Xanadu?
- -----------------------------------
-
-
- 5a
-
-
- The Xanadu Team
-
- Email
- Write to xanadu-request@xanadu.com.au to join the Xanadu mailing
- list. Members of the Xanadu team monitor and contribute to the
- list on a regular basis.
-
-
- 5b
-
-
- Project Xanadu
-
- Email
- ted@xanadu.net (Ted Nelson)
- Snail mail
- Project Xanadu, 3020 Bridgeway #295, Sausalito CA 94965 USA.
-
-
- 5c
-
-
- Xanadu Australia
-
- Email
- xanni@xanadu.com.au (Andrew Pam)
- Snail mail
- Xanadu Australia, P.O. Box 477, Blackburn VIC 3130 Australia.
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
-
- 6 What Xanadu-related merchandise is currently available?
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- 6a
-
- The following items are available from:
-
- Mindful Press
- 3020 Bridgeway #295
- Sausalito, California 94965 USA
- Phone: +1 (415) 331-4422
- Fax: +1 (415) 332-0136
- Email: ted@xanadu.net
-
- * Books:
- * "Computer Lib" by Ted Nelson, 1976 collector's edition for $100.
- * "Literary Machines" by Ted Nelson, 1993 edition for $25.
- (Please enquire for pricing of Japanese edition).
- * "Xanadu Hypermedia Server documentation", 1993 draft for $250.
-
- * Papers:
- * "Virtual World Without End", 16 pages for $10.
- * "Xanadu Space 1993", 8 pages for $10.
-
- * Videos:
- * "A Technical Overview of the Xanadu System", NTSC $75, PAL $100.
-
- * Misc:
- * Xanadu Flaming X pin for $50.
-
- Add $5 postage and handling per $50 ordered, plus $15 for orders
- outside the USA. All prices quoted are in US dollars.
-
-
- 6b
-
- "Literary Machines" is also available from:
-
- Eastgate Systems
- 134 Main Street
- Watertown MA 02172 USA
- Phone: +1 (800) 562-1638 or +1 (617) 924-9044
- Fax: +1 (617) 924-9051
- Email: info@eastgate.com
- http://www.eastgate.com/catalog/LiteraryMachines.html
-
-
- 6c
-
- An audio cassette of "Xanadu - Publishing with Royalty", Ted's
- talk at ONE BBSCON in Atlanta August 1994, is available as tape
- #694-9 for US$7 plus US$5 shipping and handling (international
- orders add 20%) from:
-
- The ONE BBSCON Resource Link
- 3139 Campus Dr., Suite 300
- Norcross, Georgia 30071-1402
- Phone: +1 (800) 241-7785
- Fax: +1 (404) 447-0543
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
-
- 7 What is the history of the name "Xanadu"?
- -------------------------------------------
-
-
- 7a
-
- Marco Polo mentioned the original palace "Shan-Du", somewhere in
- Mongolia, in his autobiography.
-
-
- 7b
-
- Samuel Purchas wrote a book, "Purchas his Pilgrimage, or Relations
- of the World and the Religions observed in all Ages and Places
- discovered, from the Creation unto this Present... By Samuel
- Purchas. London, 1617" in which he related the following on page
- 472:
- > In Xamdu did Cublai Can build a stately Palace, encompassing
- > sixteene miles of plaine ground with a wall, wherein are fertile
- > Meddowes, pleasant springs, delightfull Streames, and all sorts of
- > beasts of chase and game, and in the middest thereof a sumptuous
- > house of pleasure, which may be removed from place to place...
-
-
- 7c
-
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge published the poem "Kubla Khan",
- considered the sexiest in the English language, in 1816.
- Supposedly Coleridge fell into an opiate trance while reading the
- passage in "Purchas his Pilgrimage" mentioned in answer 7b above
- and wrote a thousand lines in his mind, but was interrupted while
- trying to write it down by the infamous "person from Porlock" who
- bothered him on trivial business and made him forget the rest of
- the poem. This has been disputed by scholars who didn't believe
- there actually could have been any more to the poem.
-
-
- 7d
-
- John Livingston Lowes wrote a book called "The Road to Xanadu: A
- Study in the Ways of the Imagination" which was published by
- Houghton Mifflin (Boston) in 1927.
-
- Lowes' book traces an amazing hypertext -- the reading of Samuel
- Taylor Coleridge -- by starting from Purchas' book and any others
- which Coleridge mentions in his journals, letters, etc., and
- moving on from there to any books mentioned in the text or
- footnotes of these books, and so onwards through yet other books
- that Coleridge may well have consulted -- because we know he
- consulted others which recommended or mentioned them...
-
- Along the way, Lowes discovered many instances of the workings of
- what Coleridge himself termed "the *hooks-and-eyes* of the memory"
- -- hyperlinks again: for this is Coleridge's own term for them.
-
- It appears that Coleridge read very widely in the travel
- literature of his day, and did indeed tend to obtain many of the
- books referenced in books he was reading... and that as he went,
- his memory was saturated with the more striking phrases from these
- many books, and then *linked* them associatively...
-
- And Lowes' book itself is a gigantic hypertext, linking sources in
- Coleridge's reading not only for "The Ancient Mariner" but also
- for "Kubla Khan" -- and along the way touching on an extraordinary
- variety of topics. Lowes' book is, when all is said and done, one
- of the greatest detective and scholarly hypertexts of all time.
-
-
- 7e
-
- Orson Welles, in his famous film "Citizen Kane", named the palace
- of Charles Foster Kane "Xanadu" after the Coleridge poem. It was
- based on the real life palace of San Simeon owned by William
- Randolph Hearst.
-
-
- 7f
-
- Ted Nelson named his World Publishing Repository (trademark of
- Project Xanadu) project after the Coleridge poem, to suggest "the
- magic place of literary memory where nothing is forgotten".
-
-
- 7g
-
- The secret hideout of Mandrake the Magician in the comic strip of
- the same name was called "Xanadu" (presumably after the Coleridge
- poem).
-
-
- 7h
-
- The rock group Rush released a song called Xanadu, obviously
- inspired by "Kubla Khan", on their 1970s album "Farewell to
- Kings".
-
-
- 7i
-
- The 1980 movie "Xanadu" starring Olivia Newton-John as a muse was
- also named after the Coleridge poem, as an allusion to literary
- inspiration. She also sang the title song.
-
-
- 7j
-
- The pop group "Frankie Goes To Hollywood" released a 1984 album
- named "Welcome To The Pleasure Dome", on which the title song
- contains the line "In Xanadu did Kubla Khan a pleasure dome
- erect".
-
-
- 7k
-
- Greg Bear used "Kubla Khan" in his 1984 science fiction novel "The
- Infinity Concerto" and its sequel "The Serpent Mage" (collectively
- published as "Songs of Earth and Power"), in which the poem is
- considered a song of power whose completion would have vast
- political and social implications. The book also features a
- massive palace called Xanadu.
-
-
- 7l
-
- David Butler based the plot of his 1986 science-fiction novel "The
- Men Who Mastered Time" around the story of "Kubla Khan".
-
-
- 7m
-
- Douglas Adams used the story of the creation of the Coleridge poem
- mentioned in answer 7c above as a central part of the plot of his
- science-fiction novel "Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency".
-
-
- 7n
-
- Douglas Adams wrote a 1990 BBC Television documentary called
- "Hyperland" starring himself, former "Doctor Who" Tom Baker, Ted
- Nelson and many computer industry luminaries. The documentary
- discussed the Xanadu system and quoted "Kubla Khan".
-
-
- 7o
-
- Jane Yolen edits a "Xanadu" series of fantasy anthologies by top
- fantasy authors published by Tor Fantasy since 1993. In the
- introduction to the first volume, she gives "Kubla Khan" as the
- inspiration for the title and suggests that "the word Xanadu has
- come to be a generic name for any magical realm."
-
-
- 7p
-
- Pride Music released a cover of the title song from the 1980 movie
- "Xanadu" for the annual Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras in 1995.
- The CD single is called "Xanadu" by Olivia Featuring Paula and
- contains five remixes of the song plus a song called
- "Unconditional Love". Pride Music kindly granted us permission to
- provide one track from the CD on the Xanadu Australia home page as
- our theme song.
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
-
- Credits
- -------
-
- This FAQ was written by xanni@xanadu.com.au (Andrew Pam). Much of
- the material in the answers to questions 1, 4 and 6 was graciously
- provided by ted@xanadu.net (Ted Nelson). Thanks to
- hipbone@earthlink.net (Charles Cameron) for answers 7b and 7d.
-
- $$
-