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..what of the 2nd millenium do you think would still be in the historybooks as important?
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It's kind of early on to say, but of what we have so far to work with, I suppose the millennium might be characterized by hypocracy. People make a show of reaching out to their fellow man, nations make a show of reaching out to fellow nations, but everyone's still in it for a buck...what of the 2nd millenium do you think would still be in the historybooks as important?
The beginning of the exploration of space...what of the 2nd millenium do you think would still be in the historybooks as important?
..what of the 2nd millenium do you think would still be in the historybooks as important?
Oops, my bad. I forgot that the second millennium is the one the ends in 2000.It's kind of early on to say, but of what we have so far to work with, I suppose the millennium might be characterized by hypocracy. People make a show of reaching out to their fellow man, nations make a show of reaching out to fellow nations, but everyone's still in it for a buck.
If humans are still around to consider things important, and they have knowledge of the second millenium, then I think that the enlightenment and the internet are two pretty important things...what of the 2nd millenium do you think would still be in the historybooks as important?
You seem to think that digital information is easilly destroyed. But with the way backups work and feeds to offline systems I think it is way easier to preserve the digital information than paperwork or even stonecarving..The world is getting away from premanent documents. Everything is going electronic. One major natural disaster, a loss of energy or one country taking over the world and all those electronic documents videos and music could be wiped out.
We are so pressed for space that we even take down our monuments for building other things. Unless we control the poplulation it is going to be worse. All the buildings of today replaced with efficiancy units.
There would probably be more stuff from the 20th century and before then from the 21st century and beyond
What is "the enlightenment"?If humans are still around to consider things important, and they have knowledge of the second millenium, then I think that the enlightenment and the internet are two pretty important things.
Preserve the information itself... maybe. Preserve it in a readable form... maybe not.You seem to think that digital information is easilly destroyed. But with the way backups work and feeds to offline systems I think it is way easier to preserve the digital information than paperwork or even stonecarving..
Preserve the information itself... maybe. Preserve it in a readable form... maybe not.
I read an article a few years ago that gave a hypothetical scenario: say your grandfather, being a forward-thinking and technically-minded person, decided to "computerize" his will... and put it on a reel of 9-track tape. Would you have the means to read it? I wouldn't, and this is a technology that was in use in my lifetime. I think 10,000 years will make the problem of obsolescence even more serious.
Edit: though obsolescence is probably a moot point anyhow, since I doubt any information on a magnetic storage medium would survive for 10,000 years, seeing how we live on a big magnet.
That lets us keep widely published works, but it means that no future archaeologists will ever have a "Dead Sea Scrolls" moment where they find a sheltered, untouched storehouse of stacks and stacks of beautifully preserved data tape, floppy disks or CDs and read all sorts of new information about the people who created them.You've got to figure that there'll be people copying the old information into the new medium...like future versions of the medieval monks that diligently copied manuscripts by hand. Then some future equivalent of the printing press will be invented.
Well, 10,000 years before now would be around the dawn of writing (or proto-writing, probably more accurately), so there's a lot less written material from that era that could've survived in the first place. Today, writing practically covers every surface we can put it on, so I hope that quite a bit more of our time will survive.But yeah, 10,000 years is a long time civilizationwise. Looking at what survived to the present day from 10,000 years ago gives one a good idea of how much information might last.
CD/DVDs do not suffer from the magnetic curse.That lets us keep widely published works, but it means that no future archaeologists will ever have a "Dead Sea Scrolls" moment where they find a sheltered, untouched storehouse of stacks and stacks of beautifully preserved data tape, floppy disks or CDs and read all sorts of new information about the people who created them.
Well, 10,000 years before now would be around the dawn of writing (or proto-writing, probably more accurately), so there's a lot less written material from that era that could've survived in the first place. Today, writing practically covers every surface we can put it on, so I hope that quite a bit more of our time will survive.
But they do suffer from the curse of obsolescence, which was the main concern I was talking about.CD/DVDs do not suffer from the magnetic curse.
But they do suffer from the curse of obsolescence, which was the main concern I was talking about.