Title: As We May Think
1As We May Think
2Where we are so far
3Where we are so far
Television
4Where we are so far
Camera
Micro cam
5Where we are so far
Telephone
6Where we are so far
Wax cylinder
7Where we are so far
Stenotype
8Where we are so far
Voder
9Where we are so far
Vocoder
10- Of what lasting benefit has been mans use of
science and of the new instruments which his
research brought into existence?
11The Blessing and the Curse
Science has provided the swiftest communication
between individuals it has provided a record of
ideas and has enabled man to manipulate and to
make extracts from that record so that knowledge
evolves and endures throughout the life of a race
rather than that of an individual.
- The amount of data available far exceeds the time
one could devote to it. - The expanse of this knowledge is growing faster
than it can be digested.
12The Solution
There may be millions of fine thoughts, and the
account of the experience on which they are
based, all encased within stone walls of
acceptable architectural form but if the scholar
can get at only one a week by diligent search,
his syntheses are not likely to keep up with the
current scene.
- Any process that can be reduced to a repetitive
task, can be performed by a machine. - With machines, accessing the vast stores of
scientific data can be achieved with current
indexing methods. - Selection by association, rather than indexing,
may yet be mechanized.
13The Process
The World has arrived at an age of cheap complex
devices of great reliability and something is
bound to come of it.
- Current technology can be explored to build
computational machines. - The machines of the future will be electrical
in nature, and they will perform at 100 times
present speeds, or more.
14The Product
Consider a future device for individual use,
which is a sort of mechanized private file and
library a device in which an individual stores
all his books, records, and communications, and
which is mechanized so that it may be consulted
with exceeding speed and flexibility.
The Memex
15The Reality54 years later
Man cannot hope fully to duplicate this mental
process artificially, but he certainly ought to
be able to learn from it.
- We have Memex interconnectivity (and the
internet!) - We have portable Memexes.
- We are automating what Bush called the creative
aspect of thinkingthe selection of the data and
the process to be employed. - We are largely beyond anything Bush ever hoped
for, but there is still a long way to go.
16Man has built a civilization so complex that he
needs to mechanize his records more fully if he
is to push his experiment to its logical
conclusion and not merely become bogged down part
way there by overtaxing his limited memory.