• Hyperland: The "Fantasy Documentary" in Which Douglas Adams and Doctor

    From Open Culture@1:229/2 to All on Monday, May 18, 2020 16:50:38
    From: open.culture@bbs.alt119.net.remove-ym7-this

    Thirty years ago, the internet we use today would have looked like science fiction. Now as then, we spend a great deal of time staring at streams of video, but the high-tech 21st century has endowed us with the ability to customize those streams as never
    before. No longer do we have to settle for traditional television and the tyranny of "what's on"; we can follow our curiosity wherever it leads through vast, ever-expanding realms of image, sound, and text. No less a science-fiction writer than Douglas
    Adams dreams of just such realms in Hyperland, a 1990 BBC "fantasy documentary"
    that opens to find him fast asleep amid the mindless sound and fury spouted unceasingly by his television set - so unceasingly, in fact, that it keeps on spouting even when
    Adams gets up and tosses it into a junkyard.

    Amid the scrap heaps Adams meets a ghost of technology's future: his "agent," a
    digital figure played by Doctor Who star Tom Baker. "I have the honor to provide instant access to every piece of information stored digitally anywhere in the world," says
    Baker's Virgil to Adams' Dante. "Any picture or film, any sound, any book, any statistic, any fact - any connection between anything you care to think of."

    Adams' fans know how much the notion must have appealed to him, unexpected connections between disparate aspects of reality being a running theme in his fiction. It became especially prominent in the Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective
    Agency Series, whose
    wide range of references includes Samuel Taylor Coleridge's Kubla Khan - one of the many pieces of information Adams has his agent pull up in Hyperland.

    Adams' journey along this proto-Information Superhighway also includes stops at
    Beethoven's 9th Symphony, Picasso's Guernica, and Kurt Vonnegut's theory of the
    shape of all stories. Such a pathway will feel familiar to anyone who regularly
    goes down "
    rabbit holes" on the internet today, a pursuit - or perhaps compulsion - enabled by hypertext. Already that term sounds old fashioned, but at the dawn of the 1990s actively following "links" from one piece of information, so common now as to require no
    introduction or explanation, struck many as a mind-bending novelty. Thus the program's segments on the history of the relevant technologies, beginning with U.S. government scientist Vannevar Bush and the theoretical "Memex" system he came up with at the
    end of World War II - and first described in an Atlantic Monthly article you can, thanks to hypertext, easily read right now.

    Though to an extent required to stand for the contemporary viewer, Adams was hardly a technological neophyte. An ardent early adopter, he purchased the very
    first Apple Macintosh computer ever sold in Europe. "I happen to know you've written interactive
    fiction yourself," says Baker, referring to the adventure games Adams designed for Infocom, one of them based on his beloved Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
    novels. Though Adams' considerable tech savvy makes all this look amusingly prescient, he
    couldn't have known just then how connected everyone and everything was about to become. "While Douglas was creating Hyperland," says his official web site, "a student at CERN in Switzerland was working on a little hypertext project he called the World
    Wide Web." And despite his early death, the man who dreamed of an electronic "guidebook" containing and connecting all the knowledge in the universe lived long enough to see that such a thing would one day become a reality.

    Related Content:

    Play The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Video Game Free Online, Designed by Douglas Adams in 1984

    In 1999, David Bowie Predicts the Good and Bad of the Internet: "We're on the Cusp of Something Exhilarating and Terrifying"

    John Turturro Introduces America to the World Wide Web in 1999: Watch A Beginner's Guide To The Internet

    Pioneering Sci-Fi Author William Gibson Predicts in 1997 How the Internet Will Change Our World

    Sci-Fi Author J.G. Ballard Predicts the Rise of Social Media (1977)

    Arthur C. Clarke Predicts the Internet & PC in 1974

    Based in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. His projects include the book The Stateless City: a Walk through
    21st-Century Los Angeles and the video series The City in Cinema. Follow him on Twitter at @
    colinmarshall, on Facebook, or on Instagram.

    Hyperland: The "Fantasy Documentary" in Which Douglas Adams and Doctor Who‘s Tom Baker Imagine the World Wide Web (1990) is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don't miss our big
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