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Silvio Castelletti's avatar

Great issue, Karena. These are fundamental questions. Lots of food for thought here, thank you!

In his 2016 book “The Inevitable: understanding the 12 technological forces that will shape our future” Kevin Kelly fleshes out his view of the future of technology over the next thirty years. I'm sure you know it. One super interesting idea that left a mark is that "The printed book is by far the most durable and reliable long-term storage technology that we have". A statement that I didn’t expect in a book on the future of technology (but that I loved to read in the printed version of the book). In a subsequent interview, he elaborates “I am the co-chair of the Long Now foundation, where we've been encouraging and fostering long-term thinking for 25 years, and one of the projects we looked at was the concern of moving information into the future. As we looked at this general trend in our society of going digital, the realization was that a lot of this digital information is not very permanent at all: it is very susceptible to being obsoleted by the next generation of things. Then when we turned to look at books we realized that, comparatively, books on paper are amazingly durable: if you keep them dry they will last for thousands of years, unlike your floppy disc, which nobody can read right now”.

I'm sure you know KK. He's also the subject of my first curation essay in WOP, published a few months ago https://silviocastelletti.substack.com/p/the-inevitable-kevin-kelly

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Rick Lewis's avatar

I'm torn between using this as a wake-up call to properly account for all the content I have strewn across the internet, and on the other hand, letting it all go, like the Tibetan sand mandalas that are made over hundreds of hours and then brushed away in an instant, acknowledging the inevitability of impermanence. When do we let go of what we've digitally hoarded? (Some author just talked about this recently, but can't remember who?)

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