Re: Original Kubuntu fan
I agree the technology moves pretty fast, but I also have noted that the design of human beings is probably going to be a limiting factor, at least with respect to the I/O interface (which WON'T be going into my sinus, btw). For example, the Dell QWERTY keyboard that I'm typing this on is not very different than the keyboard on the IBM card punch machine that I used in my 1972 COBOL class. And that one was pretty much the same as the QWERTY keyboard on my electric typewriter, which was from the mid-1960s. The design of our hands and fingers, and manual dexterity, is pretty fixed.
Likewise, our ability to speak and hear language isn't going to change, although training can speed up the average person's rate of speech and hearing comprehension a bit. And we remain strongly visual creatures -- and our eyesight, focal range, and reading comprehension is fixed (within a range around the average). So probably advancements such as those envisioned by GG will be largely oriented to efficient accommodation of the average person's "I/O" capabilities, in addition to the sheer computational speed.
IMHO.
I agree the technology moves pretty fast, but I also have noted that the design of human beings is probably going to be a limiting factor, at least with respect to the I/O interface (which WON'T be going into my sinus, btw). For example, the Dell QWERTY keyboard that I'm typing this on is not very different than the keyboard on the IBM card punch machine that I used in my 1972 COBOL class. And that one was pretty much the same as the QWERTY keyboard on my electric typewriter, which was from the mid-1960s. The design of our hands and fingers, and manual dexterity, is pretty fixed.
Likewise, our ability to speak and hear language isn't going to change, although training can speed up the average person's rate of speech and hearing comprehension a bit. And we remain strongly visual creatures -- and our eyesight, focal range, and reading comprehension is fixed (within a range around the average). So probably advancements such as those envisioned by GG will be largely oriented to efficient accommodation of the average person's "I/O" capabilities, in addition to the sheer computational speed.
IMHO.
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