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- Negroponte has
- been working in
- computers since
- before most
- people had even
- heard of them.
- For decades he
- was the prophet
- of a revolution
- which is now
- upon us. "The
- control bits of
- that digital future
- are in the hands of
- the young," he
- says. "Nothing
- could make me
- happier."
- #
- Multimedia was
- born, Negroponte
- says, when MIT
- was asked by the
- US military to
- devise a realistic
- mapping system
- for unfamiliar
- surroundings.
- This was the
- Aspen Project:
- the streets of
- Aspen, Colorado,
- were filmed from
- the front of a
- truck and put on
- videodisk. An
- interactive
- program allowed
- the user to 'drive'
- around the town
- on screen
- #
- Multimedia's
- combination of
- sound, animation,
- video and graphics
- is only possible
- because all those
- information
- sources can be
- 'digitized'. TV
- transmissions
- still use analog
- networks - but
- not for long. In
- 1992, Negroponte
- predicted the
- merging of all
- electronic media
- #
- For Negroponte
- the information
- superhighway is
- more than a
- telecommuni-
- cations tool.
- He is sure we are
- racing to a brave,
- new, digital world;
- others may think
- his vision sounds
- like a nightmare
- in a microchip
- #
- Communications
- in cyberspace
- enable ideas and
- information to be
- exchanged freely
- around the globe.
- Negroponte and
- others believe
- that totalitarian
- regimes will in
- future be unable
- to stem the
- liberating tide of
- information
- #
- The development
- of multimedia
- has gone hand in
- hand with tech-
- niques such as
- virtual reality
- and computer
- modeling. VR
- has reached a
- peak of sophist-
- ication in flight
- simulators, and
- computer modeling
- is used in archi-
- tecture, design,
- and now in
- medicine too
- @
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