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- Newsgroups: alt.cyberspace
- Message-ID: <cfNlKE200WB4IFj4hz@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 18:06:56 -0500
- From: "William C. Hulley" <bhulley+@CMU.EDU>
- Subject: Re: MEMES (was: RE: Cybrspc Grvty, Def of Cybrspc)
- In-Reply-To: <1993Jan25.055925.15498@Princeton.EDU>
- Lines: 25
-
- Excerpts from netnews.alt.cyberspace: 25-Jan-93 Re: MEMES (was: RE:
- Cybrspc.. by John Alan Dunning@chagal
- > 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.
-
- the value of "lost" technologies might be great given their re-use
- potential. examples include stainglass and weaponary. the windows of
- notre dame are essentially irreplacable because the manufacturing art
- was undocumented and died with the last of the practicing artists. in
- future wars imagine a weapons art where defense and offense are both
- based on *big* weapons, oh say, particle and laser beams. now imagine
- introducing long-forgotten projectile-based weapons back into the
- mix. (this is a notion that has been pursued more than once in
- sci-fi). in either case, the recovery of the lost technology
- creates a monetary (stainglass) or power (weapons) advantage for the
- finder.
-
- - bill
-
-