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blue bits. red rocks.
Wednesday 7 April 2010

The best way to predict the future is to invent it. Alan Kay

Tuesday 23 June 2009

All this was possible because Alan Kay, an engineer at Xerox’s Palo Alto Research Center in the 1970s, understood what Moore’s law was doing to the cost of computing. He decided to do what writer George Gilder calls “wasting transistors.” Rather than reserve computing power for core information processing, Kay used outrageous amounts of it for frivolous stuff like drawing cartoons on the screen. Those cartoons—icons, windows, pointers, and animations—became the graphical user interface and eventually the Mac. By 1970s IT standards, Kay had “wasted” computing power. But in doing so he made computers simple enough for all of us to use. And then we changed the world by finding applications for them that the technologists had never dreamed of. This is the power of waste. When scarce resources become abundant, smart people treat them differently, exploiting them rather than conserving them. It feels wrong, but done right it can change the world. Chris Anderson

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