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COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community
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COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD251111 Internet And Online Community

Page 2: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

WHAT IS TECHNOLOGY?

• Defined• “practical application of knowledge”• “the use of science in industry, engineering, etc.”• “a machine, piece of equipment, method, etc.”• “the collection of tools, including machinery, modifications, arrangements

and procedures used by humans”

• Greek Origin• Techne - "art, skill, cunning of hand“• -logy – “a combining form used in the names of sciences or bodies of

knowledge”

Page 3: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

AND COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY?

• The Computer• Programmable device that can carry out arithmetic or logical operations• Conventionally consisting of a processor & memory

• (to help us use them we connect input and output devices)

• So Computer Technology in the Modern World?

Page 4: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

THE EVOLUTION OF COMMUNICATION

Page 5: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

EARLIEST COMMUNICATION

Page 6: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

SPEECH

Sets Humans apart from animals

Estimated 1.5million-200,000 years ago

    Mutation of the FOXP2 gene

Facilitated transfer of knowledge through generations

Forms the basis of written languages.

Page 7: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

PROGRESS TOWARDS WRITING

Symbols

    Allow message longevity but represent speech acts

Cave Paintings

    Oldest date from around 30,000 BC

Petroglyphs

    Around 10,000 BC carving developed to make incisions into rock surface

Pictograms

    While Petroglyphs show a single scene, Pictograms narate a story

Ideogram

    Ideograms represent concepts such as emotions

Page 8: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

WRITING

Around 2-3,000 BC the Sumerians developed the first writing system.

    Evolved from Pictograms

    Developed into Cuneiform

    Around 1,000 characters -> 400 characters (Hittite         

        Cuneiform)

    Symbols pressed into clay

Egyptian Hieroglyphs were derived from Sumerian writing.

    "It is a complex system, writing figurative, symbolic, and phonetic all at once, in the same text, the same phrase, I would almost say in the same word." (Champollion)

Page 9: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

DEVELOPING AN ALPHABET

Egyptian Hieroglyphics were logosyllabic, i.e. symbols stand for;

    Words

    Sounds

    or to place a word in a category    

The Phonetic components of Hieroglyphs were crucial to developing an alphabet.

The Egyptians developed a set of 22-24 Hieroglyphs which were used to record foreign names etc.

Page 10: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

PROTO-SINAITIC

Also known as Proto-Canaanite

Around 2,000-1,700 BC

Migrant workers translated Egyptian Hieroglyphs into the Canaanite language

E.g. The Egyptian "Pr" (or Per), meant house

(or Floorplan).  This became "bayt", which 

was Canaanite for house.

Acrophony is when a letters name begins with the letter itself.

        Bayt --->  "Bet" ---> "Beta" ---> "B"

Page 11: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

SPREADING THE WORD

Page 12: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

THE GREEKS

Vowels were a hindrance when writing in Pheonician, (as well as Egyptian / Hebrew).

But in Greek they were essential, and afforded equal status as consonants.

Together with the "Latins" (Romans) the alphabet evolved into this!

Other tribes evolved their alphabets differently, but most stem from the Proto-Sinaitic.

Page 13: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

TECHNOLOGY?

What technology have we discussed so far?

Page 14: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

THE PRINTING PRESS

105AD - Chinese invent paper

    The Chinese also developed wood-block printing, and books with hard covers and movable type (circa. 1041).

    However, Chinese has thousands of characters, so traditional block printing was still preferred.

~1440 - Gutenburg 'invented' the printing press

    Ability to mass print books.

    Whereas before it could take a monk 20 years to transcribe the bible

    Gutenburg combined a variety of mechanical technologies to perfect his invention.

Page 15: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

THE PRINTING PRESS

Gutenburg was named #1 person of the millennium by A&E Network & Time Life.

Ahead of;

    Christopher Columbus            Freud

    Galileo Galilei                         Einstein

    Shakespeare                          Lincoln

    Newton                                  Darwin

    Da Vinci                                 Beethoven

Why did this technology invention have such a great impact?

Page 16: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

TELECOMMUNICATION

Transmission of signals over a distance, for the purpose of communication.

Visual, Audio (and later electronic)

    Fires

    Beacons

    Smoke Signals

    Drums

    Horns

Page 17: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

TELECOMMUNICATION

The Problem:

How do we use fires / beacons / smoke signals to send a message;

    Consider the fire beacons in Lord of the Rings.

        N0 FIRE = No Problem

        FIRE = Problem!

The Solution:

    Semaphore

Page 18: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

HYDRAULIC TELEGRAPH

Circa 400BC

Page 19: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

SEMAPHORE

France 1792.

2*2m long arms with 7 positions

1*cross bar with 4 angles

7*7*4 = 196

196 different symbols

556 stations following line of sight

Total distance 4,800km 

Paris to Lille = 15 stations / ~32 mins

Page 20: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

SEMAPHORE

                    Sweden -->

UK

                              Germany -->

Page 21: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

ELECTRICAL TELEGRAPH

The presence and flow of charge 

    Electrons & Protons

    Very Fast

Early versions used a grid like this->

Later Morse invented his code.

This pre-dates Optical Semaphore

Page 22: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

ELECTRICAL TELEGRAPH

Requires 'wires', which is a problem particularly at wartime.

Maxwell: "We have strong reason to conclude that light itself is an electromagnetic disturbance in the form of waves propagated through the electromagnetic field."

Marconi demonstrated that communication is possible wirelessly

Page 23: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

TELEPHONE, TELEVISION...

1876: Bell demonstrated the telephone

Now the wires can talk.

Combine this with Marconi, and the airwaves start to sing - we have radio.

Add some pictures & we have a TV.

Page 24: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

TO THE COMPUTER

• Input

• Processing

• Output

Page 25: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

EVOLUTION OF INPUT DEVICES

• Punched Cards – early 1950s

Page 26: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

KEYBOARDS

• What is the legacy of the typewriter?

Page 27: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

THE MOUSE

• Direct Interaction at last!• Evolved from mechanical wheels, to balls,

to optical

• The opportunity for a GUI• WIMP

• Windows, Icons, Menu, Pointer

Sandstein

Page 28: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

TOUCH BASED INPUT

• Predates Mouse• So why did the mouse

take off first?

• Stylus Input• Grown more popular with

more recent tablets

Page 29: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

MOBILE INPUT

• 1 step forward, 2 steps back!?• Multiple Key Presses?

• Eventually T9• Miniature keyboards?• Predictive Text & Auto correction! LOL• The introduction of Netspeak

Page 30: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

MULTI-TOUCH & GESTURES!

• Even more direct interaction!

Page 31: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

WHAT ABOUT NOW?

• Non-Touch Gesture Based Interactions• Consider Minority Report?

What next?

No need to gesture?

Thought based interactions?

Page 32: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

OUTPUT EVOLUTION

• From CRT to LCD to Plasma• Desk Space• Resolution• Refresh Rate• Style!

• But… do we need a ‘screen’?

Page 33: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

DIFFERENT SIZE SCREENS

• The Inch, The Foot & The Yard?

Page 34: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

3D PROJECTION

• Holograms?

• Retinal implants?

Page 35: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

QUOTE

• “Having tasted the benefit of interconnection, we will continue the process until virtual reality is "real reality". That is, our senses will no longer be limited to the here and now. The ultimate user interface will be a direct neural stimulation and output. Our eyes will become cameras and our ears, microphones. We will touch, taste, and smell remotely. We will share direct brain-brain links, achieving "mind-meld" with others.”

Steve Czarnecki (Lockheed Martin)

Page 36: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

NON-VISUAL OUTPUT?

• Sounds!• Much Higher Quality Speakers!• But how about distributing sounds?• OR, NOT distributing sounds?

• Smells?

• Touch?

• Taste?

Page 37: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

CONTEXT AWARE COMPUTING

• Sensing context from the environment to determine correct responses.• If I walk into a room and it senses my presence

• “Where” • “Who”

• How about sensing other things?• When am I doing something?• What am I doing?• Why am I doing it?

Page 38: COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES & THE MODERN WORLD 251111 Internet And Online Community.

10 BREAKTHROUGH TECHNOLOGIES 2014

1. Agricultural Drones

2. Ultraprivate Smartphones

3. Brain Mapping

4. Neuromorphic chips

5. Genome Editing

6. Microscale 3-D Printing

7. Mobile Collaboration

8. Oculus Rift

9. Agile Robots

10.Smart Wind & Solar Powerhttp://www.technologyreview.com/lists/technologies/2014/