Posts

Showing posts from October, 2019

Reflections : Good work

It was touched that good work would take time. I first got to the Internet 17 or 18 years ago. It was really a new world. It was really fun to connect to other worlds from my home computer and watch videos and photos by joining Web community that shared similar or interesting ideas with me. At that time, the encoding time that had to wait to see the video was the basic 3 minutes. Literally, it was three minutes to wait for the video, and we had to wait while we were watching the video. Streaming was inconceivable, and every Web video needed time to load. We sent songs to each other via e-mail, and Internet messengers first became popular and began to be used. But time has passed and now it has become a very small world, and people do not understand that it takes time. I miss the generation of waiting sweetness that could have taken time. It was beautiful even though it took time. Even if it was the same Web page as it is now.

Reflections : machine stops

Set in a world where humans live underground and rely on giant machines to provide their needs, the story predicted technologies such as instant messaging and the Internet. This story describes a world in which most people have lost the ability to live on the surface of the Earth. Each individual now lives in a standard cellar that meets all physical and mental needs with a universal machine. Travel is allowed, but it is unpopular and almost unnecessary. Communication takes place through a kind of instant messaging / videoconferencing system that allows people to focus on their only activity: sharing ideas and knowledge. What I felt when I saw this story was that we were being controlled a little bit, and that the development of science that was so far away at this time was now realized, and I thought that science really permeated us. We have no doubt that the Internet is now this advanced. It's just that at some point our science has changed little by little and now we're enj...