CornerPuzzlePieces wrote:
just saying that wanting to do away with paper altogether is pretty brave and kind of silly, considering harddrives aren't a time-honored method. They are very new, history-wise..
I expect much the same thing was said as paper began to replace stone or clay tablets.
"What, use
that flimsy nonsense to store valuable data?! But it
burns, and water washes off the writing!"
Quote:
Can you imagine a harddrive lasting over a 3 year sea voyage, getting bounced around, exposed to moisture, dust, static, sand. And then needing electricity to power it up when your done with all that?
Yes, easily. Every technology requires a "care and feeding" regime - even paper, and if the benefits of using a technology are great (as they clearly are with hard disks), then those requirements simply become absorbed into that functionality. It just becomes "this is what's needed to use X".
Look at the way a ship's compass was carefully mounted, to ensure it functioned properly in rough seas - or chronographs, used in calculating a position.
Any precision technology requires
some degree of protection but generally, as a technology improves through new ideas, the requirements for protection diminish - hence the electronic compass, GPS and SSDs.
I think paper (and paper-like material) holds a relatively unique position because we're able to convey meaning simply by scratching marks on it, and that extreme level of simple functionality is unlikely to be
completely replaced.
But when several million pages of information can be moved or duplicated with 100% accuracy in seconds, why would paper even be considered
practical in those situations?
_________________
Giraffe: a ruminant with a view.