In reading the intro to this article, I was reminded of “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy”. The mice built the first computer, called Deep Thought, to give them the answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe, and everything. It gave them the answer, but they didn’t know what it meant. They needed to know the question, so Deep Thought tells them how to build a much more complex computer that will give them the question. This is sort of an example of bootstrapping, but it was the tool itself that created the better tool.
It is hard for me to imagine computers being any other way than they are today. Therefore, it’s kind of hard to see exactly what the goal of Engelbart and ARC’s research was leading to. It went from an academic, exclusive medium to a commercial system available to anyone with enough money and minimal training. It seems that computers and the internet as we know them today was, as many things are in America, built on the idea of How can we make money from this?
The gulf between those who write programs and those who use them (with the exception of shareware/freeware) is also the gap between those who wrote the original version of a program and those who write version 4.0. It has been said in calss that there are useless lines of code in programs like Word because no one who is working on it now can find or recognize those codes.
I’m not sure if this was deliberate or just an editing mistake, but the heirarchy of the article was messed up in some places, the most obvious case being 3b5 in the same line as 3b4cl (which was maybe supposed to be 3b4c1).