Predicting the Future
Predicting the Future
Predicting
the future is notoriously difficult. Who could have imagined, in the middle
1970s, for example, that by the end of the 20th century, computers would be as
common in people's homes as TV sets? In the 1970s, computers were common
enough, but only in big busines, government departments, and large
organizations. These were the so-called mainframe machines. Mainframe computers
were very large indeed, often occupying whole air-conditioned rooms, employing
full-time technicians and run on specially-written software. Though these large
machines still exist, many of their functions have been taken over by small
powerful personal computers, commonly known as PCs.
In 1975,
a primitive machine called the Altair was launched in the USA. It can properly
be described as the first 'home computer' and it pointed the way to the future.
This was followed, at the end of the 1970s, by a machine called an Apple. In
the early 1980s, the computer giant, IBM produced the world's first Personal
Computer. This ran on an 'operating system' called DOS, produced by a then
small company named Microsoft. The IBM Personal Computer was widely copied.
From those humble beginnings, we have seen the development of the user-friendly
home computers and multimedia machines which are in common use today.
Considering
how recent these developments are, it is even more remarkable that as long ago
as the 1960s, an Englishman, Leon Bagrit, was able to predict some of the uses
of computers which we know today. Bagrit dismissed the idea that computers
would learn to 'think' for themselves and would 'rule the world', which people
liked to believe in those days. Bagrit foresaw a time when computers would be
small enough to hold in the hand when they would be capable of providing
information about traffic jams and suggesting alternative routes, when they
would be used in hospitals to help doctors to diagnose illnesses, when they
would relieve office workers and accountants of dull, repetitive clerical work.
All these computer uses have become commonplace. Of course, Leon Bagrit could
not possibly have foreseen the development of the Internet, the worldwide
system that enables us to communicate instantly with anyone in any part of the
world by using computers linked to telephone networks. Nor could he have
foreseen how we could use the Internet to obtain information on every known
subject, so we can read it on a screen in our homes and even print it as well
if we want to. Computers have become smaller and smaller, more and more
powerful, and cheaper and cheaper. This is what makes Leon Bagrit's predictions
particularly remarkable. If he, or someone like him, were alive today, he might
be able to tell us what to expect in the next fifty years.
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