[hackerspaces] first time seeing tron
Frantisek Apfelbeck
algoldor at yahoo.com
Wed Sep 5 09:36:38 CEST 2012
by the way I have read part of this book from Johnny Ryan: A History of the Internet and digital future, and it was really nice, I hope to finish it when I have access to it again ...
http://johnnyryan.wordpress.com/net-history-2010/
Could you recommend another good books on the topic of computer development, Internet, hacker history etc? You know some classics.
Thanks,
Sincerely,
Frantisek Algoldor Apfelbeck
biotechnologist&kvasir and hacker
http://www.frantisekapfelbeck.org
"There is no way to peace, peace is the way." Ghandi
________________________________
From: Frantisek Apfelbeck <algoldor at yahoo.com>
To: Stewart Dickson <mathartspd at gmail.com>
Cc: Hackerspaces General Discussion List <discuss at lists.hackerspaces.org>
Sent: Wednesday, September 5, 2012 4:18 PM
Subject: Re: [hackerspaces] first time seeing tron
Thanks Stewan for the info and links I will do some more studying!
And by the way as a child from behind the "Iron curtain" The Lawnmower Man in which you have been involved was I think first "computer heavy" graphic movie which I have seen, I guess around 1994-95.
Sincerely,
Frantisek Algoldor Apfelbeck
biotechnologist&kvasir and hacker
http://www.frantisekapfelbeck.org
"There is no way to peace, peace is the way." Ghandi
________________________________
From: Stewart Dickson <mathartspd at gmail.com>
To: Frantisek Apfelbeck <algoldor at yahoo.com>; Hackerspaces General Discussion List <discuss at lists.hackerspaces.org>
Sent: Wednesday, September 5, 2012 12:42 AM
Subject: Re: [hackerspaces] first time seeing tron
Hello, Frantisek,
Well, I was a computer programmer in a very interesting place in 1982,
when "TRON" came out. (Directly from graduating the Bachelors in
Electrical Engineering in 1981).
It was AT&T Bell Telephone Laboratory, Naperville, IL -- (Not New
Jersey) -- I was employed by Western Electric Company/AT&T
Technologies. But, the rest of Bell Labs was available by network
extension. AT&T/Bell Labs had their own satellites in 1982. That
was how the data network was run.
I was interested in computer graphics, and so I soon discovered that
Bell Labs had several Information International Inc. (III -- or
"Triple-I") FR-80/Comp80 vector-graphics microfilm printers -- the
same kind of printers used to render the digital imagery for "TRON".
In Illinois, the camera heads they used with the FR-80/Comp80 shot to
B/W positive 35mm unperforated film. The vector graphics
display had
a huge addressable resolution -- Like 40,000 points in any direction
-- and could resolve 33 lines-per-millimeter on 35mm
film -- I measured it using a microscope. It was good enough to
create optical diffraction gratings and Fresnel Zone Plates
(diffractive
lenses/single-point holograms). The FR-80/Comp80 with the 16mm cine
camera head, suitable for rendering animation was located
in Holmdel, NJ, but was available via the data network. You got your
film back in inter-office mail.
In those days -- prior to the US Department of Justice Consent Decree
of 1984 -- The networks were all open. After 1984, the walls came
down, like Berlin. The loss of freedom in the name of Security and
division of Intellectual Property. I had never heard this term
previously.
Remember that the Billy Kluever/Robert Rauschenberg Experiments in Art
and Technology took place
in cooperation with Bell Labs:
http://www.fondation-langlois.org/html/e/page.php?NumPage=306 (1966-1980)
Remember that AT&T launched Telstar in 1962 in a cooperative venture
with NASA. (AT&T had to pay the entire bill for the launch.)
Telstar's transistors were subsequently cooked by radiation in the
magnetosphere due to above-ground nuclear tests.
Remember that numerous luminaries in the Arts came from Bell Labs --
Max Mathews (Radio Baton), Kenneth Knowlton (ASCII Art),
Lillian Schwartz. Lillian flat outright denied to me that she ever
made Art at Bell Labs -- Although she was commissioned to make films.
Kenneth has related to me the stories of official corporate denial of
ASCII-Art until it made the popular press.
-Stewart, http://us.imdb.com/Name?Stewart+Dickson
http://www.ifp.uiuc.edu/~sdickson
http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2010/10/vedic_math_machines_and_3d_zoetrope.html
http://web.archive.org/web/20100218191347/http://emsh.calarts.edu/~mathart/Clock_Cam.html
http://boingboing.net/2011/06/17/jeff-bezos-co-to-bui.html http://longnow.org/clock/prototype1
http://longnow.org/people/associate/StewartDickson
http://www.hastac.org/blogs/sdickson
http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/author.html?author=Stewart+Dickson
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 9:16 AM, Frantisek Apfelbeck <algoldor at yahoo.com> wrote:
> Hi to all,
> I have seen for the first time The Tron, great movie!
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tron
>
> Wishing for a moment to be a computer programmer back then but alas I was
> just one year old ...
>
> I just wonder if the “master
control program (MCP)” was a kind of vision of
> “Windows” coming? Or was it a "generalisation" of "control versus free?"
>
> Sincerely,
>
> FA
>
> Frantisek Algoldor Apfelbeck
>
> biotechnologist&kvasir and hacker
>
>
> http://www.frantisekapfelbeck.org
>
>
> "There is no way to peace, peace is the way." Ghandi
>
> _______________________________________________
> Discuss mailing list
> Discuss at lists.hackerspaces.org
> http://lists.hackerspaces.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
>
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