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- Newsgroups: alt.cyberspace
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!linac!att!princeton!chagall.Princeton.EDU!jdunning
- From: jdunning@chagall.Princeton.EDU (John Alan Dunning)
- Subject: Re: MEMES (was: RE: Cybrspc Grvty, Def of Cybrspc)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.055925.15498@Princeton.EDU>
- Originator: news@nimaster
- Sender: news@Princeton.EDU (USENET News System)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: chagall.princeton.edu
- Organization: Princeton University
- References: <1993Jan8.174349.5341@news.ysu.edu> <1993Jan14.061014.9842@iscsvax.uni.edu> <paulhz-180193125630@jegog.acns.nwu.edu>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 05:59:25 GMT
- Lines: 26
-
- In article <paulhz-180193125630@jegog.acns.nwu.edu> paulhz@casbah.acns.nwu.edu (Paul Hertz) writes:
- >Distributed computing systems usually employ a hierarchical file system
- >where frequently used data inhabits fast-access media, less frequently used
- >data is on slower media, and unused data gets deleted. If you are looking
- >for a basis in the physical substrate for "data-gravity" this might do...
- >
- >Still a long way from leaves sedimenting at the bottom of a pond...but when
- >data will be (fractally) compressed and recompressed rather than deleted
- >altogether, the metaphor might emerge.
-
- I wonder if what we're doing is actually laying the seeds for the
- future, information equivalent of fossil fuels. Imagine data
- prospectors sifting through terabytes of fractally compressed
- information. Most of it is useless, but occasionally they get lucky
- and a rich deposit.
-
- Would the information be useful to anyone besides archealogists? I
- don't know. What kind of "engines" would run on data fossil fuels?
- I'm not sure. The idea of old, fractally compressed data turning into
- something useful, like plant matter becoming oil, just seemed kind of
- compelling. Maybe Hollywood movie companies would employ teams of
- prospectors to look for copies of old movies which everyone has
- forgotten about, so that they could rehash the plots without expending too much
- creative energy.
-
- John
-