[Beowulf] how Google warps your brain
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Kilian CAVALOTTI kilian.cavalotti.work at gmail.comMon Oct 25 08:56:20 PDT 2010
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On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 4:53 PM, Robert G. Brown <rgb at phy.duke.edu> wrote: > the <i>mean</i> lifetime of <i>most</i> books With all due respect (and a lot is due), using HTML tags to mark emphasis using a console-only email client, *this* /is/ quite _twisted_. :) > c) Open standards for encoding mechanisms minimize the likelihood of > losing the rosetta stone that allows even lossy formats to be decoded, > and hence useful. If you like, one has to also preserve the encoding > scheme along with the encoded information. I would add that being able to easily reconstruct a (physical or logical) codec system is a mandatory requirement, but that being able to decode content with no other physical device than the mere support is a big plus. That's precisely the huge advantage of printed books over any electronical support you can imagine: you don't need anything but your eyes and candle light to extract content from them. It's true that languages and grammar evolve, and that content from printed books can also be lost, if the language they're printed in disappears. But that's the case for any kind of text, whatever the support is. About physical supports: optical media gets scratched, magnetic media gets demagnetized, electronic media gets obsoleted, paper media degrades, stone engraved media takes a lot of room on your shelves. There's no such thing as a universally good and eternal support. Ever-going duplication is probably the only way to preserve content on the long run. Cheers, -- Kilian
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