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The Shock of the Old

 
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Author The Shock of the Old
rffrydr
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PostPosted: Thu Mar 19, 2009 9:07 am    Post subject: The Shock of the Old Reply with quote

What's old is new and new is old. The question is, what do you need to do?

http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2007/05/14/070514crbo_books_shapin

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In “The Shock of the Old: Technology and Global History Since 1900” (Oxford; $26), David Edgerton, a well-known British historian of modern military and industrial technology, offers a vigorous assault on this narrative. He thinks that traditional ways of understanding technology, technological change, and the role of technology in our lives, have been severely distorted by what he calls “the innovation-centric account” of technology. The book is a provocative, concise, and elegant exercise in intellectual Protestantism, enthusiastically nailing its iconoclastic theses on the door of the Church of Technological Hype: no one is very good at predicting technological futures; new and old technologies coexist; and technological significance and technological novelty are rarely the same—indeed, a given technology’s grip on our awareness is often in inverse relationship to its significance in our lives. Above all, Edgerton says that we are wrong to associate technology solely with invention, and that we should think of it, rather, as evolving through use. A “history of technology-in-use,” he writes, yields “a radically different picture of technology, and indeed of invention and innovation.”


Long past the age of steam—and well into the age of automobiles and aviation—the power of horseflesh remained critical. In the Italian campaign alone, the United States Army’s 10th Mountain Division used more than ten thousand horses and mules, and the great tank general George S. Patton wished he’d had many more:

In almost any conceivable theater of operations, situations arise where the presence of horse cavalry, in a ratio of a division to an army, will be of vital moment. . . . Had we possessed an American cavalry division with pack artillery in Tunisia and in Sicily, not a German would have escaped, because horse cavalry possesses the additional gear ratio which permits it to attain sufficient speed through mountainous country to get behind and hold the enemy until the more powerful infantry and tanks can come up and destroy him.

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rffrydr
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PostPosted: Mon Mar 23, 2009 11:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Twitter re-invents "come and get it!"

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=101881984
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rffrydr
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PostPosted: Sun Mar 22, 2009 8:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

From what heights can "the future" fall?

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-lunar22-2009mar22,0,931431.story?page=1
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