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- Date: Sat, 04 Mar 1995 14:09:22 EST
- From: Rob Slade <roberts@mukluk.decus.ca>
- Subject: Book Review: "USENIX Conference Keynote Address" by Barlow
-
-
- CSBARLOW.RVW 950110
-
- "USENIX Conference Keynote Address: San Francisco, CA, January 17, 1994",
- Barlow, 1-56592-992-6, U$9.95
- %A John Perry Barlow
- %C 103 Morris Street, Suite A, Sebastopol, CA 95472
- %D 1994
- %G 1-56592-992-6
- %I ORA Audio/O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.
- %O U$9.95 800-998-9938 707-829-0515 fax: 707-829-0104 nuts@ora.com
- %P 70 min.
- %S Notable Speeches of the Information Age
- %T "USENIX Conference Keynote Address: San Francisco, CA, January 17, 1994"
-
- John Perry Barlow, lyricist for the Grateful Dead, co-founder of the
- Electronic Frontier Foundation (and self-described "retired Wyoming
- cattle rancher") was the keynote speaker for the Usenix conference in
- San Francisco, January 17, 1994. This tape includes both his talk and
- the question period. (It is also available on Internet Talk Radio for
- those willing to consume that much bandwidth, and possibly spend
- longer downloading the file than the playing time of the speech.)
-
- Barlow primarily discusses the cultural conflict between the
- traditional Internet and the new commercial interests generally
- identified with the "information superhighway". There is discussion
- of government, cryptography, censorship, and the evolution of the aims
- and work of the EFF. One point reiterated throughout is the need for
- those deeply involved in the technology to study and become involved
- in the political forces which drive the use (and abuse) of advanced
- communications.
-
- A minor theme is the call for "rich media". Barlow laments the fact
- that human beings assimilate text at a very low rate (generally below
- 1200 bps), but take in experience far faster. Rich media (or
- multimedia) are therefore much more efficient for human communications
- purposes. Barlow ignores two, very vital, factors here. The first is
- that the bandwidth requirements for non-text messages are currently
- very expensive, and promote a dependence on an elite level of
- technology. (This is interesting in view of the link with Internet
- Talk Radio). The second consideration is that, despite almost a
- century of involvement with multimedia, people seem to be only
- marginally capable of generating communications in non-text forms.
- Automation isn't likely to effect that.
-
-
- copyright Robert M. Slade, 1995 CSBARLOW.RVW 950110. Distribution
- permitted in TELECOM Digest and associated publications. Rob Slade's
- book reviews are a regular feature in the Digest.
-
-
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