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Fall 2000 Colloquium Series William
Crossman Goddard's Office of the Assistant Director for Information
Sciences continues the GSFC Fall 2000 Series of the Information Sciences
and Technology (IS&T) Colloquium with Prof. William Crossman, whose
presentation will focus on How Talking Computers Will Recreate an Oral
Culture by 2050. Prof. Crossman's prediction is that in the 21st Century,
VIVOs (voice-in/voice-out computers using visual displays but no text)
will make written language obsolete, which will result in there being
no compelling reason for schools to teach literacy skills. Written language/text
is a technology - an ancient technology for storing and retrieving information.
Talking computers will do this same job more quickly, efficiently, cheaply,
and universally, and won't require users to know how to read and write.
By 2050, the electronically-developed nations will become oral cultures;
by 2150, a worldwide oral culture will be in place. Today's push to
develop VIVOs is a further step in the human evolutionary drive to move
past written language's limits and return to the biogenetic, oral-aural,
pre-alphabetic roots of human communication and information storage.
VIVOs will transform every area of human activity in the 21st Century,
including education, the arts, human relations, politics, and business.
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| Information Science & Technology Colloquium Series Responsible NASA Official: Paul Hunter Curator: Patrick Healey + Privacy Policy and Important Notices This file was last modified on Thursday, 24-Apr-2008 14:45:20 EDT |
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