In 1945 Vannevar Bush proposed a machine that acted as a “supplement ” to memory and met the particular information needs of its user. Because this “memex ” recorded “trails ” of selected documents, it has been seen as a precursor to hypertext. However, this paper considers Bush in relation to earlier concerns about memory and information, via the ideas of Robert Hooke and John Locke. Whereas Bush modeled the memex on the associative processes of natural memory, Hooke and Locke concluded that an external archive had to allow collective reason to overcome the limits of individual memory, including its tendency to freeze and repeat patterns of ideas. Moreover, they envisaged an institutional archive rather than one controlled by the interests...
This chapter investigates how some of the early hypertext designs have become inherited vision withi...
In Information and Intrigue ; Colin Burke tells the story of one man's plan to revolutionize the wor...
One of the visions almost excessively quoted in current discussions of what the informa-tion infrast...
In 1945 Vannevar Bush proposed a machine that acted as a "supplement" to memory and met the particul...
In the Atlantic Monthly of July 1945, Vannevar Bush, the American engineer and wartime science advis...
It has been nearly sixty years since Vannevar Bush’s essay, “As We May Think, ” was first published ...
Vannevar Bush's famous article, “As We May Think” (1945), described an imaginary information retriev...
We can find the first anticipation of the World Wide Web hypertextual structure in Bush paper of 194...
This article describes the evolution of the design of Vannevar Bush's Memex, tracing its roots in Bu...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2014This project revisits memex, a hypothetical knowled...
Vannevar Bush posited the Memex vision in 1945. A Memex is defined as a device where everything coul...
In 1945, Vannevar Bush described an imaginary device, which he called Memex in his famous article ca...
Includes bibliographical references and index.Foreword: To Mandelbrot in Heaven / Stuart Moulthrop -...
Knowledge management and production is performed today by means of search engines. This implies the ...
The acquisition and storage of knowledge always has been a key element in the development of human s...
This chapter investigates how some of the early hypertext designs have become inherited vision withi...
In Information and Intrigue ; Colin Burke tells the story of one man's plan to revolutionize the wor...
One of the visions almost excessively quoted in current discussions of what the informa-tion infrast...
In 1945 Vannevar Bush proposed a machine that acted as a "supplement" to memory and met the particul...
In the Atlantic Monthly of July 1945, Vannevar Bush, the American engineer and wartime science advis...
It has been nearly sixty years since Vannevar Bush’s essay, “As We May Think, ” was first published ...
Vannevar Bush's famous article, “As We May Think” (1945), described an imaginary information retriev...
We can find the first anticipation of the World Wide Web hypertextual structure in Bush paper of 194...
This article describes the evolution of the design of Vannevar Bush's Memex, tracing its roots in Bu...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2014This project revisits memex, a hypothetical knowled...
Vannevar Bush posited the Memex vision in 1945. A Memex is defined as a device where everything coul...
In 1945, Vannevar Bush described an imaginary device, which he called Memex in his famous article ca...
Includes bibliographical references and index.Foreword: To Mandelbrot in Heaven / Stuart Moulthrop -...
Knowledge management and production is performed today by means of search engines. This implies the ...
The acquisition and storage of knowledge always has been a key element in the development of human s...
This chapter investigates how some of the early hypertext designs have become inherited vision withi...
In Information and Intrigue ; Colin Burke tells the story of one man's plan to revolutionize the wor...
One of the visions almost excessively quoted in current discussions of what the informa-tion infrast...