Click here to receive your FREE subscription to Campus Technology
Home > Prescient Postings
Opinion
Prescient Postings
7/12/2007
By Terry Calhoun
Professional wrestler Christopher Benoit killed his wife last month. The police found her body on a Monday. The Wikipedia article on Benoit had already noted his wife's death,
14 hours before the police found her body. Strangeness? Yes, but not prescience. It turns out that a prankster vandalized the Wipedia entry and, purely coincidentally, got it right. Sometimes that happens.
I recall the third time I took college Algebra. (Got an A+ that third time; let's not discuss the first two.) The professor, who already had taken a dislike to my strange questions and comments, asked the young woman sitting beside me to define a "null set" (A set that contains nothing.) The young lady, Laura Stearns, said: "The set of purple cats." I raised my hand and, when called on, said: "Last night I was painting my bookshelves lavender. My cat rolled on a wet shelf. I have a purple cat." The professor was annoyed: "Let's not quibble." If I hadn't previously annoyed her, she might just have said, "Sometimes that happens."
The Wikipedia vandal didn't know something the rest of the world was yet to learn, and my cat had not rolled on the lavender paint because she had intuited my forthcoming need for a purple cat. Those were both coincidence. But the increasing transparency that technology is continuing to create in the previously much denser information world is, among other things, creating situations where we can figure lots of things out that we just could not have figured out before; at least not in time for the knowledge to be useful.
New York Times writer Noam Coeh, writing in "
In the Blink of a Byte, Future Becomes Past," quotes experts to make the point that there are two ways, beyond mere coincidence, that the Internet can create the appearance of prescience: seeing into the future.
Some of it is owing purely to the "natural" dissonance and timing differences between traditional communications methods and communication by the Internet. For example, I was following the Bush Administration's DOJ Scandal and had incredible details about it, long before anyone relying on mainstream news, print, or broadcast, would have even known that there was a scandal. But I didn't really have foreknowledge of things that had not yet occurred. The attempt to politicize the Department of Justice had already taken place and was continuing, and even the obstruction of justice to cover it up was in the past, although not yet "old news," since it was not even traditional news at all, yet.
One of my favorite authors,
Arthur C. Clarke also happened to have uttered one of my favorite expressions. It's his Third Law: "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." That's where "
Recommended Reading
- College of Southern Nevada Implementing Angel To Run Online Courses
The College of Southern Nevada (CSN), a community college in Las Vegas with 41,000 students, has adopted the Angel Learning Management Suite (LMS) to support its online course offerings. In Spring 2008 CSN began evaluating alternatives to WebCT, which it currently runs, and made the decision to adopt Angel in the fall. In January 2009, CSN's 865 sections of online enrollment will be delivered using the Angel LMS.
- Toshiba Brings DisplayLink to Docking Station
Toshiba has introduced a new USB docking station that incorporates DisplayLink--a technology that allows computers to connect to projectors and other types of displays through USB 2.0.
- Mitsubishi Ships SXGA+ Projector with DICOM Simulation
Mitsubishi has begun shipping a new LCD-based SXGA+ projector aimed at higher education, specifically medical schools. The new MH2850U, according to Mitsubishi, is "specially engineered for projecting DICOM simulation images for use in medical education and training."
- First Look: Komodo IDE 5.0
Last month, ActiveState released Komodo IDE 5.0, the company's latest integrated development environment (IDE). Komodo supports multiple programming and markup languages, including HTML, JavaScript, PHP, Perl, Java, Python, C++ and more. It does not support some .NET languages at present, such as ASP/ASP.NET, C# and VB.NET.
- IBM Offers Cloud Computing Help
IBM last week announced consulting services specifically designed to help organizations assess their options in using cloud computing technology. "Cloud computing" is a much argued term, but it typically refers to solutions delivered over the Internet, rather than via customer premises-installed software.
- Hollins U Chooses Omnilert for Emergency Notification Ahead of VA Deadline
Hollins University, among other higher ed institutions in Virginia, has implemented Omnilert's e2Campus emergency notification system (ENS) just ahead of a state-mandated deadline requiring them at every public institution of higher education by Jan. 1. Hollins itself isn't a public campus, but wished to implement an ENS before the end of the year, the school said in a company statement.