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22.03: Programs, Games, Virtual Reality, the future.
Email was the first "interconnective" device on the internet. Email and message boards. Then came graphical interfaces and personal websites, refined search engines, and of course, our friend the blog. I can remember downloading both Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator thinking I needed both. I still recall the frustration and difficulty at trying to send photos through the internet as "early" as 1996. People always tell me my websites and blogs crash their old computers, because I've been graphics oriented since I got online. I "predicted" personal streaming video, and my first streams were online in 2001.
What have you purchased for your computer? How new or old is your system? Take a photo, or better yet, create a "video blog" and upload it to your Xanga "video" section and post it for the topic.
Don't Forget to turn off the music player before watching the video!
How many programs do you run?
I mainly use the computer for digital video editing and photo compositing, and my main programs have always been for image manipulation. Since the video end of computers is the fastest growing, this is possibly why I had to upgrade two of my four computers, and why I've had four computers. Programs for video editing were: MGI VideoWave and Ulead VideoStudio. I also installed two video card upgrades on two computers, with video inputs and outputs. I upgraded the MGI software two times. Then I got the Pinnacle Studio which included another video card with inputs and outputs for the latest machine. I have recently downloaded a trial copy of Sony Vegas Platinum, and I 'm seriously thinking of purchasing a cut rate downloadable copy of the full $600.00 pro software for $79.00 Or I might go with Avid's Liquid, another $600.00 program which sells really cheaply if downloaded from a cheap software site. I still have to investigate whether or not sites like Downloadable Software are credible merchants.
Image editing sofware has been second on my most used list. I still have Micrografx Picture Publisher 8.00. The software hasn't been made for years, but I know the program like the back of my hand. I also have a Waco Art Pad and Adobe Photoshop LE came with the hardware. Others are Macromedia Fireworks, which came in my suite with Dreamweaver, which is two versions old, and the only $600.00 software I ever purchased retail. (I might upgrade on a software site to Studio 8, which includes Flash. Dreamweaver is where I construct my website.
I have Homestead software for that website. Then there are five or six clipart packages. I have all the Mad Magazines on CD Rom till 2001. I have about five editions of PrintShop and PrintMaster. I used to use them a lot but haven't installed them on this computer yet, and don't miss them. I get most of my images online now, or from my own photography.
There are programs for optimizing downloading from the internet. I had Microsoft Office on my last computer, which did come with XP, although I thought I upgraded to XP in the attached Video Blog on that machine. Since the discs were "signed" for the other computer, I can't use them on this one, which came with Works, which I don't think I've ever opened.
For music storage, I use Itunes. I have the topmost "free" Windows Media, Divx, RealVideo and Quicktime players. For browsing, there's the SBC (Now back to AT&T Yahoo Browser, which came with my latest DSL service, IE6, which I never open, and Mozilla Firefox. The Yahoo browser was the first I used with "tabbed browsing". Both Firefox and IE have that now.
Screenshot savers, Roxio Media Creator (although I need to upgrade to install the package on this latest version of XP, so right now I can't input analog audio, unless I use 'video capture" in another program, Picasa for photo storage and manipulation, and Micrografx Windows Draw 6 for text insertion into images, and for vector art. I had my a copy of TurboCad 10, which I use at work for electrical schematics, is a great vector drawing tool for 3D graphics, and I had it on my last computer, but never loaded it on the new machine. It's amazing how many programs I thought I used to need that I don't use at all.
What do think about the future of the internet?
I'm planning to write a sci fi novel, "Paradigm Shifiting" set in the future, when the internet is replaced by Virtual Reality, sort of like the "holodeck" on the Star Trek series, where "sites" are "worlds" that you can explore, and your "avatar" or "self" can be whatever you want it to be. I think that VR, represented by online multiplayer games in the present, will evolve into a "Matrix" like cyber world that is indistinguishable, or completely different, depending upon the "destination" than the real world. (Which will be somewhat barren due to global warming)
That's another complete blog. Multiplayer role playing games are the first step towards the Matrix like "virtual" internet of the future. We will be able to "immerse" ourselves in the experience, and we will be able to go anywhere the digital imagineers can take us. Stay tuned for the first chapter to "Paradigm Shifting", my planned new novel about the brave new world of virtual reality, multiple cloned lifetimes, and how mankind deals with conflict when there is none left in the world.
COMING SOON TO THIS VERY BLOG!
EDIT: 2/10/07 8:18 am pst. "Forward into the Past" Longtime readers know that occasionally I will post older entries under the Header "WayBack Posts". The leader image shows Mr. Peabody and Sherman from the "Mr. Peabody's Improbable History" cartoon scooting about in the time machine that appears in the Geo. Pal movie. I was surfing the internet this morning and came upon a website called Archive. org with a "Wayback" function. You type the name of a URL in the locater and it shows you what that site looked like historically. Being the narcissist I am, I of course typed www.allthingsmike.com and here is THE PAGE which "takes you back" to when I instituted the site on my server in 2001. Now I'm going to type in the URL for the original site. I'm discovering things I wrote and created that I don't even remember. And you can do this for any site on the internet. It's like Google cached pages all on one page.! |