Blast from the past

In preparing for my talk for the Bamboo Juice conference at the Eden Project in Cornwall next week, I find I’m doing a lot of WWILFing. After spending far too long reading about and , and editing footage of a Von Braun-inspired orbital habitat, I got completely sidetracked into trying to figure out the storage capacity of attached to Voyager 1.

I still haven’t found an answer—I’ve asked Voyager’s cousin for help—but I did stumble across a gem of a document from 1995. It’s by Simon Pockley and it’s called Lest We Forget or Why I chose the World Wide Web as a repository for archival material. Written in the infancy of the web, it makes for fascinating reading. It’s like a seedling of the semantic web. Some of the projections were way off but some of them were eerily prescient. Here’s my favourite passage:

Technological obsolescence is only a part of the problem in the preservation of digital information. The World Wide Web is a flexible carrier of digital material across both hardware and software. Its ability to disseminate this material globally, combined with its inherent flexibility, allow it to accommodate evolving standards of encoding and markup. Survival of significant material on-line is dependent on use and use is related to ease of access.

The document contains a number of hyperlinks to related material, all of which are collected into footnotes at the end. What’s heartbreaking is to discover how many of those links no longer resolve. Just a handful from the original list remain:

Four fifths of those links resolve to a single domain, that of the National Library of Australia. So much for our distributed repository of archival material.

Have you published a response to this? :

Previously on this day

12 years ago I wrote Iteration and You

Liveblogging a presentation by Daniel Burka at The Future of Web Design.

12 years ago I wrote From Design to Deployment

Liveblogging a presentation by Jon Hicks at The Future of Web Design.

12 years ago I wrote Print is the New Web

Liveblogging a talk by Elliot Jay Stocks at The Future of Web Design.

12 years ago I wrote Photoshop Battle

Liveblogging a Photoshop tennis match at the Future of Web Design.

12 years ago I wrote Getting Your Designs Approved

Liveblogging a presentation from Larissa Meek at the Future of Web Design.

12 years ago I wrote Demo hell

The air gets sucked out of the room at The Future of Web Design.

12 years ago I wrote The User Experience Curve

Liveblogging a talk from Andy Budd at The Future of Web Design in London.

12 years ago I wrote User Experience vs. Brand Experience

Liveblogging a session from Steven Pearce and Andy Clarke at the Future of Web Design.

14 years ago I wrote Bedroll

Not a blogroll.

18 years ago I wrote A thousand words

Jeb has posted some pictures of his trip to Europe.