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As We Could Have Thought: Deploying Historical Narratives of the Memex in Support of Innovation

The memex has been hailed as an inspiration by many innovators since it was first described in 1945. Allowing users to combine and annotate information from diverse sources stored in microfilm and to create links between related items, the memex is said to predict today's information devices. I...

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Published in:Technology and culture 2020-04, Vol.61 (2), p.480-511
Main Author: Leslie, Christopher
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Language:English
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description The memex has been hailed as an inspiration by many innovators since it was first described in 1945. Allowing users to combine and annotate information from diverse sources stored in microfilm and to create links between related items, the memex is said to predict today's information devices. In this way, the memex is presented as a cultural imperative, yet few of the innovators who invoke the memex account for the introspective thinking that the memex was supposed to provide. Even those who did respect the memex's disruptive potential were unable to divert the direction of innovation because their ideal users conflicted with existing paradigms. The repeated misunderstanding of the memex-which this article observes in early information science, commercial versions of hypertext, and the Web-is an important warning about the use of simplistic historical arguments to undergird innovation.
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subjects Cold War
Creativity
Design
Designers
History
Hypertext
Information overload
Information technology
Innovations
Miscommunication
Narration
Narratives
Personal computers
Science
Software engineering
Technological change
Technology
title As We Could Have Thought: Deploying Historical Narratives of the Memex in Support of Innovation
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