\nBack in — I think — the mid-to-late-80s there was a Scientific American article on what was going on at the time at Xerox PARC. The basic idea was very straightforward — your data and most of your computer horsepower were on the network (substitute \"cloud\") and there were three basic kinds of devices — whiteboards (wall screens), tablets, and post-it notes. According to the article the first two were real and actually worked (and the researchers were using them for their day-to-day work) while the last were crude hacks using LCD displays with very limited capability.\n\nWe still can't make post-it-note-sized networked computer displays cheap and small enough to completely fulfill that vision, but we're getting there. Certainly, being able to cheaply print RFID-tagged notes is totally doable. Xerox PARC may not have been very good at producing commercial products, but it certainly did a great job of pointing the way.\n\nThree kinds of interactive displays — tiny, cheap, and disposable; portable; and big. Seamless networked computing. (And maybe there's room for immersive VR in there somewhere.) That's where the puck is going to be. Time for Apple to saddle up (again) and help get us there.","$updatedAt":"2024-06-05T09:10:30.275+00:00",path:"apple-s-megapixel-year",_created:"2024-07-09T20:29:29.651Z",id:"4818",_modified:"2024-07-09T20:29:29.651Z","$id":"4818",_path:"post/path=apple-s-megapixel-year"},"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"}}