Memex

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The "Memex" was an influential imaginary machine discussed in a famous article called "As We May Think" written by an American scientist called Vannevar Bush in 1945. In many ways it foresaw and even inspired the invention of the web.

He imagined a machine that contained all your information in chunks. Everything would be easily accessible. You could add little notes in the margins of things and string things together to express some knowledge. These were called "associative trails" and the idea was that you could share them. Other people could insert them into their own Memex, and then they could explore that knowledge too.

So, like wiki pages really, the point is that the flow is bottom-up. He saw them as tools for thought, maybe in particular, collective thought.

As many people have pointed out (e.g. [1]), in lots of ways, we're still catching up with this vision.

See also Artificial Intelligence and Related Pages.

Related Pages

 Is IT making us stupid? Bottom-up Learning by wiki
 Machine learning Epistemology for beginners Information diet
 Cabinet of Curiosities Punctuated equilibrium How to add stuff to a wiki
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