Jeremy.
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On 11 Feb 2016, at 10:39, Alex Hough <r.a....@gmail.com> wrote:Could we schedule this topic to be on the next hangout?
TW represents what computers should always have been doing -- fulfilling the 1945 Memex proposal, and lifting our thinking off of an accountant's balance sheet and onto a surf board (and then putting us back on the balance sheet if appropriate). The hyperlink and the mouse should have taken us quite directly to personal information management. Instead we got the Internet and carpal tunnel syndrome. Somehow we ended up with "typewriter plus" and "accounting ledger plus", when what we needed was "thinking plus". TW sets this right. The slow adoption, both of the application itself and its functionality (which by now should have inspired many new enterprises), must mean frightening things for humans. The continued development of TW is one of the more hopeful things I know of.
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HiI had a similar reaction the first time I played around with a spreadsheet many years ago (Lotus 123.) Of course, spreadsheets are now old hat, ...
Matabele, I think you mean Lotus 123 was exciting to discover, gave you a feeling of power? My moment of discovering that kind of glory was Electric Pencil, which my Dad let me play with on his computer in 1981. I wrote two poems that I still think about. Four years later I found this kind of rush again, using a mouse for the first time and fill in pixels with MacPaint.
I think it would be a lot of fun to gather people's "computer epiphanies", mind-blowing first encounters. TW wasn't the first Big Bang software experience for me, but it's the one that has been the most significant since the 1980's and it's the one that still delivers hits of adrenal joy.
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I remember HyperCard with some affection and nostalgia but these days the only generative software I use of similar ilk is OpenSimulator. As of today's viewer update I can display (and potentially edit) TiddlyWiki 5 inworld. This is going to be very useful for documenting builds (that's 17th century Liverpool being mapped out in the background, tiddlywiki.com and tiddlymap.org on a "prim" in the foreground). Sometimes it's great when worlds "collide"!
Best wishes
Peter