The PC era is dying. Welcome to the collective computer era
“The purpose of computers is human freedom.” – Ted Nelson, Computer Lib/Dream Machines (1974) The computer is as emblematic of the American dream as the automobile. Perhaps ...
Source: www.fastcompany.com
“The purpose of computers is human freedom.” – Ted Nelson, Computer Lib/Dream Machines (1974) The computer is as emblematic of the American dream as the automobile. Perhaps it’s only natural that Apple, HP, Adobe, Google, and Amazon were each launched out of a garage. It was inside the garage that the modern era of personal computers was born, where anyone could own the power to calculate millions, and then billions of processes per second. PCs are a tool designed to move us faster, with a hood you can pop open to soup up. We insist that our computers speed up every year if only because it’s proof of progress. The very term “personal computer” promises liberty and autonomy; this isn’t the bus, but a transistor-powered rocket carrying a payload of rare earth minerals and rainbow hued headlights. The PC shrunk whole industries of work to our desktops, driving our ambitions anywhere they wanted to go. Whether you were publishing without a publisher, cre