Multimedia and Digital Commentary Online

 

Site maintained by

Michael Bush

 

Brigham Young University

Provo, UT 84602

 

Featuring thought on digital and multimedia technologies, book recommendations, and interesting and useful links.

 

Last update:
27 October 2001

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DVDetails

Get the latest on DVD Technologies at DVDInsider.com.

Jim Taylor, the author of DVD Demystified (Buy it!) has an excellent overview on DVD.

Jim also has THE most authoritative list of answers to Frequently Asked Questions.

Miscellaneous Local Links

From 1996 through 1998 we covered for the Multimedia Monitor the Milia Conference held each year in Cannes, France.


Places to Go

A friend of mine in the multimedia industry once told me he was setting a trend by being the first to announce that he was NOT reading Wired.  We don't always like their style, but they do know what is going on.

The Los Angeles Times provides excellent coverage of what is happening with the impact of digital technology on life in general and on the media in particular.

Check out the Internet.com site for a lot of up-to-date information on Internet technologies.

Simba and Cowles have put together SimbaNet, a Web site that looks very interesting for "media professionals."

Random Rips

Check out these mini-essays on topics of interest. You can even talk back, sound-off with your own ideas!
Drill and kill?

Digitally Speaking

What do you make of the brouhaha regarding the DOJ vs. Microsoft? we published our first piece on "Gates Hate" almost three years ago.
"Fear and Loathing in Cyberspace" is a three-part series of articles with a subsequent update that  examines the role of Microsoft Corporation and other "eagles of the Information Age" and how they have influenced the evolution of the microcomputer industry. Is Bill Gates the villain in this story -- or could he be a hero? Are there any heroes to be found?

Read previous essays on digital technologies on our  Stroll Down Memory Lane.


On the Web

Language Learning via the Web shows how the World Wide Web is experiencing exponential growth through its primary use as a means of accessing information. Unfortunately many educators were a bit late in considering its potential for education.

World Wide Web Technology: What's Hot and What's Not. In 1996 we were feeling bad about almost missing the "Internet Revolution" but then we realized that Bill Gates had almost missed it as well.

Conference
Presentations

Check out PowerPoint presentations from recent conferences.
ACTFL Dallas 1999

Current Reading

Check out our recommendations for books that will keep you "in the know!"  You can even purchase them from Amazon.com by clicking on the Buy it! links.

The Age of Spiritual Machines: When Computers Exceed Human Intelligence 
Buy it!

Ray Kurzweil shows here why he is the genius he is purported to be.  The ideas he lays out will fascinate some and scare others.  In either case, he challenges our  thinking and makes us wonder, even marvel, about the future of digital technologies.


Other Reading

Check out our previous recommendations

This is our "must read" list. It will be hard to anticipate what will be happening with digital technology if you have not read a significant part of the works listed here!

George Glider is an author that Bill Gates reads. No foolin'!

George Gilder Said:

Early in the next decade, the central processing units of 16 Cray YMP supercomputers, once costing collectively some $320 million, will be manufacturable for under $100 on a single microchip. Such a silicon sliver will contain approximately one billion transistors, compared to some 20 million transistors in currently leading-edge devices. Meanwhile, the four-kilohertz telephone lines to America's homes and offices will explode into some 25 thousand billions of possible hertz of fiber optics. Twenty-five thousand gigahertz is the intrinsic capacity of every fiber thread: enough communications power to hold all the phone calls in America on the peak moment of Mother's Day.

(Quoted by President Bill Clinton in his 1998 State of the Union Message and taken from George Gilder's Life after Television, p. 16-17.)


Gilder Gold

Gilder has now published his "Telecosm Series" of articles in his new book, Telecosm: How Infinite Bandwidth Will Revolutionize Our World. Buy it!

Note: The background of our graphic is Leonardo da Vinci's drawing of his conception of the world's first automated computational device. For a nice treatment of this concept see:  A Brief History of Mechanical Calculators. There was even an interesting controversy that surrounded the creation of a working model based on da Vinci's design.