Difference between revisions of "In the Beginning was the Command Line"
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In retrospect, this was telling me two things about people's relationship to technology. One was that romance and image go a long way towards shaping their opinions. If you doubt it (and if you have a lot of spare time on your hands) just ask anyone who owns a Macintosh and who, on those grounds, imagines him- or herself to be a member of an oppressed minority group". | In retrospect, this was telling me two things about people's relationship to technology. One was that romance and image go a long way towards shaping their opinions. If you doubt it (and if you have a lot of spare time on your hands) just ask anyone who owns a Macintosh and who, on those grounds, imagines him- or herself to be a member of an oppressed minority group". | ||
− | [http://adam.shand.net/iki/library/in_the_beginning_was_the_command_line/ Read the entire thing]] | + | [http://adam.shand.net/iki/library/in_the_beginning_was_the_command_line/ Read the entire thing] |
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+ | [[Category:Articles]] |
Latest revision as of 05:42, 24 December 2010
History
Originally Published by Neal Stephenson In the Beginning was the Command Line is an important article for culture, both in the present, future and historical sense. It cuts into what really is happening in the world, our obsession with technology, surface and interfaces, and where all this is going. It's become a classic that is revered by all who find it.
Excerpt
MGBs, Tanks, and Batmobiles
"Around the time that Jobs, Wozniak, Gates, and Allen were dreaming up these unlikely schemes, I was a teenager living in Ames, Iowa. One of my friends' dads had an old MGB sports car rusting away in his garage. Sometimes he would actually manage to get it running and then he would take us for a spin around the block, with a memorable look of wild youthful exhiliration on his face; to his worried passengers, he was a madman, stalling and backfiring around Ames, Iowa and eating the dust of rusty Gremlins and Pintos, but in his own mind he was Dustin Hoffman tooling across the Bay Bridge with the wind in his hair.
In retrospect, this was telling me two things about people's relationship to technology. One was that romance and image go a long way towards shaping their opinions. If you doubt it (and if you have a lot of spare time on your hands) just ask anyone who owns a Macintosh and who, on those grounds, imagines him- or herself to be a member of an oppressed minority group".