This Day in Information: Birth of ALA

Today in 1876, during the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia, 103 librarians, 90 men and 13 women, responded to a call for a “Convention of Librarians” to be held October 4-6 at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. At the end of the meeting, according to Ed Holley in his essay ALA at 100, “the register was passed around for all to sign who wished to become charter members,” making October 6, 1876 to be the American Library Association’s birthday. Today it has about 63,000 members.

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InfoStory Quotes: Writers’ Opinions

“…we try as often as possible to commission important fiction writers to review important fiction… Often, however, fiction writers are disinclined to review their fellow practitioners for fear they won’t like the book as much as they might wish.” –Sam Tanenhouse, New York Times Book Review Editor

“In his copy of Tom Wolfe’s ”A Man in Full”… [John] Updike wrote comments like ‘adjectival monotony’ and ‘semi cliché in every sentence.’ A comparison with Updike’s eventual New Yorker review suggests that authors will write things in their books that they won’t say in public.” –Craig Fehrman, “Lost Libraries,” Boston Globe

“Blurb, (n.) 1. A flamboyant advertisement; an inspired testimonial. 2. A fulsome praise; a sound like a publisher. Blurb, (v.) To flatter from interested motives; to compliment oneself.” –F. Gelett Burgess, Burgess Unabridged: A Classic Dictionary of Words You Have Always Needed, 1914.

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This Day in Information (Extra): The First Complete English Bible

Today in 1535, the first complete English-language edition of the Bible, translated by Miles Coverdale, was printed in Antwerp. It was printed in England 3 years later. The significance of this event is summarized by Liah Greenfeld in Nationalism: “..the reading of the Bible planted and nurtured among the common people in England a novel sense of human – individual – dignity, which was instantly to become one of their dearest possessions, to be held dearer than life and jealously protected from infringement. This was a momentous development. Not only has it awakened thousands of individuals to sentiments which common people nowhere had experienced before, and gave them a position from which they were to view their social world in a new way, but it opened a new, vast terrain to the possible influence of the national idea and at once immediately broadened the population potentially susceptible to its appeal. .. The masses… would find in their Englishness the right and guarantee of the new status to which they were elevated by self-respect and see their individual destinies as linked to the destiny of the nation.”

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This Day in History: Solar-Powered Phone Calls

Today in 1955, the first field trial of a rural telephone system making use of transistors and the Bell Solar Battery was held in Americus, Georgia. Today, 1.5 billion people, one quarter of the world’s population, live without electricity, and solar-powered mobile phones dominate their long-distance communications. See here and here and here.

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InfoStory Timeline: The Web (1)

In his book Weaving the Web, Tim Berners-Lee writes: “I was excited about escaping from the straightjacket of hierarchical documentation systems…. By being able to reference everything with equal ease, the web could also represent associations between things that might seem unrelated but for some reason did actually share a relationship. This is something the brain can do easily, spontaneously. … The research community has used links between paper documents for ages: Tables of content, indexes, bibliographies and reference sections… On the Web… scientists could escape from the sequential organization of each paper and bibliography, to pick and choose a path of references that served their own interest.”

With this one imaginative leap, Berners-Lee moved beyond a major stumbling block for all previous information retrieval systems: The pre-defined classification system at their core. This insight was so counter-intuitive that even during the early years of the Web, attempts were made to do just that: To classify all the information on the Web. Google’s founders were the first to seize on Berners-Lee’s insight and build their information retrieval business on tracking closely cross-references (i.e., links between pages) as they were happening and correlate relevance with quantity of cross-references (i.e., popularity of pages as judged by how many other pages linked to them). This was what set Google apart from its competitors (if memory serves, Yahoo had at the time a “Chief Epistemologist” on staff).

Berners-Lee’s insight is frequently linked to Vannevar Bush who wrote in 1945, “Our ineptitude at getting at the record is largely caused by the artificiality of systems of indexing… Selection [i.e., information retrieval] by association, rather than by indexing may yet be mechanized.”  But I prefer to start the Web Timeline with what was, to my knowledge, the earliest use of cross-references.

This was Efraim Chamber’s Cyclopaedia, published in London in 1728. While lacking the worldwide platform for “crowd-sourcing” references that Berners-Lee invented, Chambers shared with him (and Bush) a dislike for hierarchical, alphabetical, indexing systems. Here’s how Chambers explained in the Preface his innovative system of cross-references:

“Former lexicographers have not attempted anything like Structure in their Works; nor seem to have been aware that a dictionary was in some measure capable of the Advantages of a continued Discourse. Accordingly, we see nothing like a Whole in what they have done…. This we endeavoured to attain, by considering the several Matters [i.e., topics] not only absolutely and independently, as to what they are in themselves; but also relatively, or as they respect each other. They are both treated as so many Wholes, and so many Parts of some greater Whole; their Connexion with which is pointed out by a Reference. So that by a Course of References, from Generals to Particulars; from Premises to Conclusions; from a Cause to Effect; and vice versa, i.e., in one word, from more to less complex, and from less to more: A Communication is opened between the several parts of the Work; and the several Articles are in some measure replaced in their natural Order of Science, out of which the Technical or Alphabetical one had remov’d them.”

Chambers’ Cyclopaedia was the earliest attempt to link by association all the articles in an Encyclopedia or, in more general terms, of everything we know at a given point in time. And like the World Wide Web, it moved some to voice their concern about what Google is doing to our brains. The supplement to the 1758 edition of the Cyclopaedia says: “Some few however condemn the use of all such dictionaries, on the first pretence, that, by lessening the difficulties of attaining knowledge, they abate our diligence in the pursuit of it; and by dazzling our eyes with superficial shew, seduce us from digging solid riches in the mine itself.”

In the next installment of the timeline we will see how, in the first half of the 20th century, the vision of total recall and relevance took the the concept of an encyclopedia and magnified it into a very large physical repository of all human knowledge.

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InfoStory Quote: Smart Phones, 1899

“Telegraphy without wires – how attractive it sounds… A little instrument that one can almost carry in the pocket, certainly in a microscopic grip, and if your corespondent be likewise equipped, you may arrest his attention and talk to him almost any time or place, with no intervening medium but the…ether… Possible? Certainly. But will it pay? For this is the final criterion with which this utilitarian age tests all such propositions, and for the present under ordinary circumstances, the answer must be NO.” —Electrical World, June 10, 1899. [Quoted in Susan J. Douglas, Inventing American Broadcasting 1899-1922]

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SANA: Telemedicine in Action

“Known as Sana, which means “healthy” in Spanish and Italian, the open-source software system relies on smart phones running Google’s Android operating system to connect health-care workers in rural regions with physicians in urban areas. Using the Sana application on their phones, the workers collect patient data, including pictures and video, and send them in a text message to an electronic -record database. A doctor then reviews the data and sends a preliminary diagnosis to the health-care worker by text.” —MIT News

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InfoStory Timeline: The Web

Twenty years ago, in October 1990, Tim Berners-Lee started writing code for a Web client on his new NeXT computer. By mid-November he had a Web browser/editor which he called the World Wide Web. The year before, in March 1989, Berners-Lee circulated a proposal to a few colleagues at CERN, stating that it “discusses the problems of loss of information about complex evolving systems and derives a solution based on a distributed hypertext system.” The proposal contained a diagram of an “information mesh” and concluded that “We should work toward a universal linked information system, in which generality and portability are more important than fancy graphics techniques and complex extra facilities. The aim would be to allow a place to be found for any information or reference which one felt was important, and a way of finding it afterwards. The result should be sufficiently attractive to use that the information contained would grow past a critical threshold, so that the usefulness of the scheme would in turn encourage its increased use.”

Twenty years later, I’m writing this on a widely-used blog platform which allows me to easily link my information to anything else that lives “online” which today is getting close to all existing knowledge. And my “information mesh” is part of a vast network of connections around which an entire new information universe – and associated new ventures, new celebrities, new industries, new business models, new cultural productions, new communities – has been built.

Why has the Web been so successful and had such an impact on our lives? The driving force behind this ever-expanding, constantly changing information universe is its unique ability to provide us with solutions to what Berners-Lee identified in his proposal as the key problems relating to information: Finding it and preventing its loss.

We are what we remember. The Web has delivered on the promise of computer technology, the hopes of the early innovators and users: It augments the remarkable cognitive abilities of the human brain exactly where it is deficient. It allows us to indefinitely preserve memories, personal and collective, and to retrieve the most relevant piece of information when we need it. It brings us closer to the vision of total information recall and relevance.

In future posts, I will outline a “Web Timeline,” one milestone at a time. It starts in 1728.

1. Chambers’ Cyclopaedia

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This Day in Information: “Radio Music Box”

Today in 1915*, David Sarnoff, Chief Inspector for The Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America wrote to his superiors: “I have in mind a plan of development which will make radio a ‘household utility’ in the same sense as the piano or phonograph. The idea is to bring music into the home by wireless. The receiver can be designed in the form of a simple ‘Radio Music Box,’ placed on a table in the parlor or living room.”  

*It is not clear whether this was indeed written in 1915, or 1916, or 1920, or even later. But it is clear that by 1916, Lee De Forest and others were broadcasting news and transmitting music over the wireless to multiple recipients.

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InfoStory Quant: Enagaging with the Web

A quarter of Americans (32% for Internet users) have posted product reviews or comments online.

46% of Americans use social networks such as Facebook or LinkedIn (up from 5% in 2005).

Source: Pew Internet

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