My favorite book by Isaac Asimov is Foundation, the first book of what was the Foundation Trilogy (late in life, Asimov went into a frenzy of sequels and tie-ins, and then other writers were authorized to extend it). Foundation is a remarkable book, presaging the move from the golden age (\"the future is metal and science solves all problems\") of the 30s, 40s, and 50s to the social-science-infused new wave SF of the 60s and 70s (\"language, culture, politics, and psychology matter\") exemplified by Ursula K. Le Guin.\n\nIn Foundation, the Galactic Empire is about to collapse politically, but hasn't realized it and isn't sympathetic to anyone who tries to point it out. Hari Seldon has invented a new science of \"psychohistory\" that is able to predict the actions of large groups of people, and has foreseen the empire's collapse. This has forced him and his followers into exile.\n
\n\t- When he is introduced, Hari Seldon uses a device very much like a Newton (or iPad).
\n\t- He is also terminal (wheelchair-bound)
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\nSeldon's followers go on to create the \"Foundation\", an academic community on a poor planet at the empire's periphery. The empire thinks it is forcing Seldon into exile, but he expected to be exiled and has planned for it.\n\nForced to adapt to their circumstances, but possessed of a very intelligent and capable population, the Foundation perfects miniaturization (presumably miniaturization a good deal beyond that necessary to create ubiquitous slate computers) and becomes technologically and economically dominant within its region.\n\nAs the Foundation expands and progresses, it periodically strikes crises. After each crisis is resolved, a recording of Hari Seldon, in his wheelchair, appears on a screen in the middle of the Foundation's capital and explains how whatever it was that just happened was predicted along with its solution.\n\nAnd then along comes a person with extraordinary powers called \"The Mule\" who upsets everything, but that's the second book.\n\nIt seems to me that the Foundation makes a nice metaphor for Apple as it finds itself today. Jobs has laid out a plan, and it's probably going to proceed swimmingly for a while. The question is, when will Apple's \"Mule\" appear, what form will it take, and how will Apple deal with it?","$updatedAt":"2024-06-05T09:10:30.272+00:00",path:"hari-seldon",_created:"2024-07-09T20:29:55.061Z",id:"4469",_modified:"2024-07-09T20:29:55.061Z","$id":"4469",_path:"post/path=hari-seldon"},"page/path=blog":{path:"blog",css:"",imageUrl:"",prefetch:[{regexp:"^\\/(([\\w\\d]+\\/)*)([\\w-]+)\\/?$",path:"post/path=[3]"}],tags:["public"],source:"",title:"",description:"",_path:"page/path=blog"}}