authors |
Anders, Peter |
year |
1999 |
title |
Beyond Y2k: A Look at Acadia's Present and Future |
source |
ACADIA Quarterly, vol. 18, no. 1, p. 10 |
doi |
https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.acadia.1999.x.o3r
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summary |
The sky may not be falling, but it sure is getting closer. Where will you when the last three zeros of our millennial odometer click into place? Computer scientists tell us that Y2K will bring the world’s computer infrastructure to its knees. Maybe, maybe not. But it is interesting that Y2K is an issue at all. Speculating on the future is simultaneously a magnifying glass for examining our technologies and a looking glass for what we become through them. "The future" is nothing new. Orwell's vision of totalitarian mass media did come true, if only as Madison Avenue rather than Big Brother. Futureboosters of the '50s were convinced that each garage would house a private airplane by the year 2000. But world citizens of the 60's and 70's feared a nuclear catastrophe that would replace the earth with a smoking crater. Others - perhaps more optimistically -predicted that computers were going to drive all our activities by the year 2000. And, in fact, theymay not be far off... The year 2000 is symbolic marker, a point of reflection and assessment. And - as this date is approaching rapidly - this may be a good time to come to grips with who we are and where we want to be. |
series |
ACADIA |
email |
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full text |
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references |
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last changed |
2022/06/07 07:49 |
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