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No Fragments Archive 10: Diskmags
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POWER_12.DK1_TALKING.PWR
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1989-12-30
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213 lines
TTTTTTTTTT PPPPPP
T P P
T PPPPPP
T P
TALKING POINT
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Last month, I asked the following:
HOW DO YOU THINK THE COMPUTING WORLD WILL BE IN THE YEAR 2000?
Well, quite a few of you wanted to delve into the future and sent in your
views. So let's have a look at them shall we?
***************************************************************************
Dear James,
"What will home computing be like in the year 2000?" A good
question, but perhaps the only thing that's sure is that it
*won't* be how we imagine it. If I'd been asked a similar
question when I used a Spectrum, I'd have said, "The nineties
will see affordable disc drives, better programmes, higher reso-
lution and more RAM." I'd almost have been right, but I
certainly wouldn't have expected to be typing this on a 4 Meg
STE, with a 1 Meg drive supplied as standard.
Going on what I've seen in the last ten years, I'd anticipate a
much faster machine, 4 to 8 Meg of RAM as standard, much higher
picture resolutions and (this is the important bit), the ability
to run programmes from other machines, and to load most formats
of text, animation and picture files. We're just getting to the
point now where you can import and export files from and to just
about any machine, and this is one way that home computing
should develop. But things never work out the way you expect
them to....
One feature that we will see is voice recognition. Imagine
being able to sit back and say, "Move Readme.Txt from drive A to
B. Run Text Writer, open Blank.Doc, start dictation". The
machine will have to be trained to recognise your particular
voice (not difficult) and will then work almost like a
spellchecker; when it hears a word it doesn't understand it'll
interrupt and flash its attempt at the word onto the screen.
Correction will be by a command or by spelling the word.
One thing we won't see (despite all the fuss being made about it
now) is handwriting recognition. The bugs will be ironed out,
but it's only really suitable for portables and specialist
machines. Voice recognition is currently used on automated
production lines and, if past experience is anything to go by,
it'll trickle down to home computers within the next five years.
Another area that's being experimented with is eye control of
computers, where a tight beam of light is bounced from the user's
eyeball onto a sensitive screen. This has been used in the
States to give severely disabled people access to computers. The
beam and your eyeball dimensions are calibrated and tested, and
you're then ready to run - so long as you don't move your head.
But ways will be found around that little problem...
As for software, we'll probably be playing 'Lemmings 207: The
Geriatrix'. Some things *never* change.
From John Weller
POWER REPLIES:
Well, I look forward to Lemmings 207...Don't you?!
***************************************************************************
Dear James,
Who knows what the year 2000 will be like when it comes to
computers? With technology moving so fast, it's hard to keep up now, let
alone see what it will be like in the next century. One thing's for sure
though...ATARI won't be around!
From Naughty But Nice
POWER REPLIES:
Sob sob...
***************************************************************************
Dear James,
I think that the year 2000 for us computing freaks will hold home
virtual reality sets because the ATARI JAGUAR CONSOLE already has a special
port for one to be plugged into and ATARI plan to make a helmet for home
use in the next few years.
I also see voice activated computers and computers will be much, much
smaller, infact, possibly handheld size (as a keyboard won't be needed as
it will be voice activated) yet much, much more POWERful.
From Coot
***************************************************************************
Dear Talking Point,
Let's hope that the year 2000 has POWER in it somewhere!
From ???
****************************************************************************
Dear POWER,
I think that we all imagine that computers are going to be much
more POWERful in the year 2000 and will all be controlled by voice or some
other different form of instruction but I believe that computers in the
year 2000 are going to be much more POWERful that we ever imagined. A 4
meg ST at the moment is pretty state-of-the-art stuff and you are sort of
looked up to with so much memory, but already, ATARI is working on
something for the STE which will allow upgrades to 12 megabytes which is
already three times as much.
I remember, not so long ago when I had an ATARI 800 with 64k. 64k was the
memory configuration that EVERYONE had. The Commodore 64, the SPECTRUM and
so on, all had aroun 64k but no more by any means. Before that, I'd had a
computer with just 1.5k so the jump to 64k seemed amazing. Now, just a few
years later, 1 megabyte is a rather small memory by todays standards. By
the year 2000, I see computers with GIGAbytes rather than MEGAbytes.
From Alan Island
POWER REPLIES:
I know EXACTLY what you mean. I used to have an ATARI 800 as well and
before that I had an ATARI 400 with just 16k. That 16k meant nothing to me
as there were no word processors of my knowledge and it seemed that I would
NEVER run out of memory. Nowadays, with my one meg STE, I churn out single
documents which take up more memory than my original ATARI had!!! Makes
you think!
****************************************************************************
Dear Talking Point,
I think that we all predict to much for the year 2000.
We all expect flying cars and speaking computers with a mind of their own.
Robots that walk around doing the household chures and so on. The reality
is that the year 2000 is just 6 years away and I see very little change in
such a small space of time.
From Michael Shanley
POWER REPLIES:
I think you are under-estimating technology a bit there Michael.
***************************************************************************
Dear James,
In the year 2000, I expect to see on my computer, POWER issue
102, so you better get working!
From Part Deux
POWER REPLIES:
Nearly there mate, just 90 issues to go!
******************************************************************************
Well, enough of all that for this month. Let's concentrate on what I want
from you for next month. This months Talking Point is:
WHAT WOULD YOU DO IF YOUR ST BLEW UP?
Get sending in your views on that and if you have your own Talking Point
that you would like discussed, then please send it in but it MUST be
computer related.