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The Philosopher of Palo Alto
Mark Weiser, Xerox PARC, and the Original Internet of Things
Buch von John Tinnell
Sprache: Englisch

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"As a pioneer of ubiquitous computing-the embedding of technology in everyday objects from thermostats to doorbells-computer scientist Mark Weiser's descriptions of smart homes, now thirty years later, might seem to approach our reality. Weiser's views certainly influenced our technology's developers-his 1991 Scientific American article "The Computer for the 21st Century" was flagged a must-read by Microsoft's Bill Gates and then circulated among the day's digirati, including those Silicon Valley insiders who crowded his beer garden-based "office hours". Unlike many of his contemporaries, Weiser's vision was motivated by the philosophies of Michael Polanyi and Martin Heidegger, collaboration with anthropologists such as Lucy Suchman, and insights from artists including Natalie Jeremijenko. He hoped to realize "tacit computing" as an escape from a single attention-grabbing screen as a portal to work, entertainment, and education. When rivals such as Nicholas Negroponte at MIT's Media Lab championed the development of smart agents (the ancestors of Siri and Alexa) or pervasive sensing in wearable technologies (proto-Fitbits or Apple Watches), Weiser balked. Weiser wanted computers to be something closer to the white cane a person with low vision might use to navigate the world. Good technology, he argued, should not mine our experiences for data to sell or demand our attention. Technology should not rob its users of the hardships that establish their expertise, but instead give them the ability to conceive of the world in new ways. In this compelling biography of a person and idea, digital studies scholar John Tinnell shows Weiser, who died of cancer at 46, would be heartbroken if he had lived to see the ways we use technology today. Informed by deep archival research and interviews with Weiser's family and Xerox PARC colleagues, this book uses Weiser's life to offer a new history of today's technological reality, an inside view of Xerox PARC during its heyday, and a compelling vision of what computers failed to be"--
"As a pioneer of ubiquitous computing-the embedding of technology in everyday objects from thermostats to doorbells-computer scientist Mark Weiser's descriptions of smart homes, now thirty years later, might seem to approach our reality. Weiser's views certainly influenced our technology's developers-his 1991 Scientific American article "The Computer for the 21st Century" was flagged a must-read by Microsoft's Bill Gates and then circulated among the day's digirati, including those Silicon Valley insiders who crowded his beer garden-based "office hours". Unlike many of his contemporaries, Weiser's vision was motivated by the philosophies of Michael Polanyi and Martin Heidegger, collaboration with anthropologists such as Lucy Suchman, and insights from artists including Natalie Jeremijenko. He hoped to realize "tacit computing" as an escape from a single attention-grabbing screen as a portal to work, entertainment, and education. When rivals such as Nicholas Negroponte at MIT's Media Lab championed the development of smart agents (the ancestors of Siri and Alexa) or pervasive sensing in wearable technologies (proto-Fitbits or Apple Watches), Weiser balked. Weiser wanted computers to be something closer to the white cane a person with low vision might use to navigate the world. Good technology, he argued, should not mine our experiences for data to sell or demand our attention. Technology should not rob its users of the hardships that establish their expertise, but instead give them the ability to conceive of the world in new ways. In this compelling biography of a person and idea, digital studies scholar John Tinnell shows Weiser, who died of cancer at 46, would be heartbroken if he had lived to see the ways we use technology today. Informed by deep archival research and interviews with Weiser's family and Xerox PARC colleagues, this book uses Weiser's life to offer a new history of today's technological reality, an inside view of Xerox PARC during its heyday, and a compelling vision of what computers failed to be"--
Über den Autor
John Tinnell is director of digital studies and associate professor of English at the University of Colorado Denver. He is the author of Actionable Media: Digital Communication Beyond the Desktop, and he has written for the Los Angeles Times and Boston Review. MORE THAN ONE HUNDRED BILLION THINGS are expected to be connected to the internet by 2030.1 Among them are thermostats that learn and remember, cars that navigate and intervene, doorbells that observe and alert, and mattresses that calculate and self-adjust. Ever since cell phones became smartphones, technologists and consumers in high-tech societies have come to embrace all manner of smart objects with astonishing speed. Connectivity has spread rapidly from personal computers into parking lots, toilets, eyeglasses, and kitchens. Roughly ten thousand websites were online in 1994; soon, appliance manufactures expect to sell two million Wi-Fi-enabled refrigerators per year. Over the past fifty years, this once-eccentric longing to animate the inanimate has become a global enterprise. Computer scientists have progressed quickly from the first bona fide "connected device" in 1970 to twenty-first-century designs for wholly connected "smart cities."
> But the race to render everything smart--sensor laden, data rich, instantly adjustable--has moved far beyond the stuff of backyards and bedrooms. The most ambitious North American plan to date surfaced in October 2017, in Toronto, where city officials launched a partnership with Google's Sidewalk Labs to create a city-within-the-city "built from the Internet up," on a languishing industrial stretch of waterfront called Quayside. Sidewalk Labs' proposal laid out a thoroughgoing merger between urban infrastructure and new tech. Enhanced sidewalks would instantly heat away snow while also gathering information about everybody who traversed them. An AI-driven electrical grid and autonomous transit system would give off 89 percent fewer green house gas emissions than Toronto's existing neighborhoods. Nothing would go unmeasured or unmonitored. Inefficiency, waste, and discomfort would be minimized with religious zeal. Google cofounder Larry Page and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau both insisted that an omniscient city could radically boost its residents' quality of life. Trudeau was especially bullish, stating at the project's onset: "I have no doubt Quayside will become a model for cities around the world." Improvements across all municipal services that might otherwise take months or years to discuss and implement would roll out swiftly and continuously thanks to the new wellsprings of citizen data that Sidewalk Labs pledged to unearth and analyze. Unsurprisingly, the project's announcement raised concerns from a slew of critics worried about the fate of human agency in such an environment. As urbanists, academics, and journalists combed through the proposal, they developed a bleak perspective on the big picture. At the same time, Google began to make greater demands. The twelve-acre Quayside parcel that it initially agreed on suddenly appeared too small. Sidewalk Labs, with Google's backing, pushed to expand the footprint to 165 acres, giving them room to build a new Canadian Google head-quarters and reason enough to allocate [...] billion Canadian. Much of Toronto interpreted the move as an act of aggression, and the critics aired their objections to receptive ears. (...) Some of the plan's more disconcerting aspects were not entirely futuristic. For several years already, advances in "insurtech" had brokered a data-driven relationship with insurance policyholders that predated Googleville's envisioned social contract. In 2014, the New York Times ran a story about "subprime" borrowers who consented to have a "starter interrupt device" installed on their vehicles in order to retain their auto insurance.8 This gadget enabled insurers to keep tabs on the borrower's vehicle at all times, even granting them power to remotely shutdown the vehicle's engine in response to observed policy breaches. The story caught the attention of Jathan Sadowski, a technology scholar who proceeded to examine all the subtle ways corporations were beginning to experiment with smart devices. Akin to the auto-starter interrupter, there was a smart toothbrush sold by Beam Technologies that captured data about its users' every brushing (duration, performance rating, time of day) and transmitted it to Beam's dental insurance staff. After taking inventory of many such practices cropping up in a wide range of sectors, including advertising and policing, Sadowski had heaps of evidence lending dramatic weight to his general conclusion: "With detailed data monitoring comes the power of behavioral modification."
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2023
Genre: Technik allg.
Rubrik: Naturwissenschaften & Technik
Medium: Buch
Seiten: 368
Inhalt: Gebunden
ISBN-13: 9780226757209
ISBN-10: 022675720X
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Gebunden
Autor: Tinnell, John
Hersteller: The University of Chicago Press
Maße: 233 x 162 x 27 mm
Von/Mit: John Tinnell
Erscheinungsdatum: 25.05.2023
Gewicht: 0,64 kg
preigu-id: 125696814
Über den Autor
John Tinnell is director of digital studies and associate professor of English at the University of Colorado Denver. He is the author of Actionable Media: Digital Communication Beyond the Desktop, and he has written for the Los Angeles Times and Boston Review. MORE THAN ONE HUNDRED BILLION THINGS are expected to be connected to the internet by 2030.1 Among them are thermostats that learn and remember, cars that navigate and intervene, doorbells that observe and alert, and mattresses that calculate and self-adjust. Ever since cell phones became smartphones, technologists and consumers in high-tech societies have come to embrace all manner of smart objects with astonishing speed. Connectivity has spread rapidly from personal computers into parking lots, toilets, eyeglasses, and kitchens. Roughly ten thousand websites were online in 1994; soon, appliance manufactures expect to sell two million Wi-Fi-enabled refrigerators per year. Over the past fifty years, this once-eccentric longing to animate the inanimate has become a global enterprise. Computer scientists have progressed quickly from the first bona fide "connected device" in 1970 to twenty-first-century designs for wholly connected "smart cities."
> But the race to render everything smart--sensor laden, data rich, instantly adjustable--has moved far beyond the stuff of backyards and bedrooms. The most ambitious North American plan to date surfaced in October 2017, in Toronto, where city officials launched a partnership with Google's Sidewalk Labs to create a city-within-the-city "built from the Internet up," on a languishing industrial stretch of waterfront called Quayside. Sidewalk Labs' proposal laid out a thoroughgoing merger between urban infrastructure and new tech. Enhanced sidewalks would instantly heat away snow while also gathering information about everybody who traversed them. An AI-driven electrical grid and autonomous transit system would give off 89 percent fewer green house gas emissions than Toronto's existing neighborhoods. Nothing would go unmeasured or unmonitored. Inefficiency, waste, and discomfort would be minimized with religious zeal. Google cofounder Larry Page and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau both insisted that an omniscient city could radically boost its residents' quality of life. Trudeau was especially bullish, stating at the project's onset: "I have no doubt Quayside will become a model for cities around the world." Improvements across all municipal services that might otherwise take months or years to discuss and implement would roll out swiftly and continuously thanks to the new wellsprings of citizen data that Sidewalk Labs pledged to unearth and analyze. Unsurprisingly, the project's announcement raised concerns from a slew of critics worried about the fate of human agency in such an environment. As urbanists, academics, and journalists combed through the proposal, they developed a bleak perspective on the big picture. At the same time, Google began to make greater demands. The twelve-acre Quayside parcel that it initially agreed on suddenly appeared too small. Sidewalk Labs, with Google's backing, pushed to expand the footprint to 165 acres, giving them room to build a new Canadian Google head-quarters and reason enough to allocate [...] billion Canadian. Much of Toronto interpreted the move as an act of aggression, and the critics aired their objections to receptive ears. (...) Some of the plan's more disconcerting aspects were not entirely futuristic. For several years already, advances in "insurtech" had brokered a data-driven relationship with insurance policyholders that predated Googleville's envisioned social contract. In 2014, the New York Times ran a story about "subprime" borrowers who consented to have a "starter interrupt device" installed on their vehicles in order to retain their auto insurance.8 This gadget enabled insurers to keep tabs on the borrower's vehicle at all times, even granting them power to remotely shutdown the vehicle's engine in response to observed policy breaches. The story caught the attention of Jathan Sadowski, a technology scholar who proceeded to examine all the subtle ways corporations were beginning to experiment with smart devices. Akin to the auto-starter interrupter, there was a smart toothbrush sold by Beam Technologies that captured data about its users' every brushing (duration, performance rating, time of day) and transmitted it to Beam's dental insurance staff. After taking inventory of many such practices cropping up in a wide range of sectors, including advertising and policing, Sadowski had heaps of evidence lending dramatic weight to his general conclusion: "With detailed data monitoring comes the power of behavioral modification."
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2023
Genre: Technik allg.
Rubrik: Naturwissenschaften & Technik
Medium: Buch
Seiten: 368
Inhalt: Gebunden
ISBN-13: 9780226757209
ISBN-10: 022675720X
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Gebunden
Autor: Tinnell, John
Hersteller: The University of Chicago Press
Maße: 233 x 162 x 27 mm
Von/Mit: John Tinnell
Erscheinungsdatum: 25.05.2023
Gewicht: 0,64 kg
preigu-id: 125696814
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