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Seeing the world in a grain of sand is a familiar fantasy for technorati. In 1992, David Gelernter published a book called Mirror Worlds , in which he describes, for a lay audience, what it will take to (as his subtitle has it) “put the universe in a shoebox.” Gelernter, in addition to being a Yale professor and (only one year after) Unabomber victim, is also an unreconstructed Platonist; he blithely throws around the conceit of a mirror world—“some huge institution’s moving, true-to-life mirror image trapped inside a computer”—as if two millennia of philosophical footnoting, culminating in, say, Richard Rorty’s Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature , hadn’t happened. For Gelernter that’s okay: the mirror world is simply the natural culmination of a march of technological progress, replacing the metaphor of computers as giant brains with the crystal ball, or palantir. Hands-on, containable (shoeboxes fit easily under the bed), but containing multitudes.

Neal Stephenson was also there, at pretty much the same time. Snow Crash (1992) is best remembered for its anticipation of Second Life with the MetaVerse, but in several extended sequences the book’s hero-protagonist Hiro Protagonist consults a palm-sized tool called, well, “Earth”: “It looks exactly like the earth would look from a point in geosynchronous orbit directly above L.A., complete with weather systems—vast spinning galaxies of clouds, hovering just above the surface of the globe, casting gray shadows on the oceans—and polar ice caps, fading and fragmenting into the sea” (109). The abstraction of information into a visual, spatial, and above all urban representation is, of course, the signature cyberpunk trope, back to the granddaddy of them all, William Gibson’s lines of light, “like city lights receding.” But what Gelernter and Stephenson both have in common is an emphasis on the geographical and the miniature. Both of them, of course, are anticipating the massive contemporary industry of GIS, which has culminated in Google Earth and its rivals, competitor products such as Microsoft’s Bing and NASA’s World Wind, putting something very much like Stephenson’s spectral spinning sphere a mere 10 or 15 MB download away from any desktop.

We can continue to multiply origin stories. There’s Buckminster Fuller, for example, and his 1960s Geospace concept, a gigantic globe wired up to receive input from databanks all over the world. But virtual earths and giant electro-mechanical orbs are at best a partial genealogy for Todd Presner and his team’s remarkable work on HyperCities, which, as Presner notes, owes as much to the traditions of cultural mapping that emerge from Benjamin’s Arcades as the panoptical fantasies of Fuller, Stephenson, and Gelernter. In his paper, Presner succinctly catalogs what sets HyperCities apart from more general tools like Google Earth: that it foregrounds temporal browsing as a fundamental aspect of the user experience; that the content privileges the interests of humanities scholars, exposing the cultural and historical transformation of space (as opposed to, say, the location of the nearest In-and-Out Burger); and finally, that the entire project is explicitly conceived as a platform for experiments in new forms of scholarly publishing. This last is what I take to be the key feature for purposes of discussion at this meeting.

Questions & Answers

how does Neisseria cause meningitis
Nyibol Reply
what is microbiologist
Muhammad Reply
what is errata
Muhammad
is the branch of biology that deals with the study of microorganisms.
Ntefuni Reply
What is microbiology
Mercy Reply
studies of microbes
Louisiaste
when we takee the specimen which lumbar,spin,
Ziyad Reply
How bacteria create energy to survive?
Muhamad Reply
Bacteria doesn't produce energy they are dependent upon their substrate in case of lack of nutrients they are able to make spores which helps them to sustain in harsh environments
_Adnan
But not all bacteria make spores, l mean Eukaryotic cells have Mitochondria which acts as powerhouse for them, since bacteria don't have it, what is the substitution for it?
Muhamad
they make spores
Louisiaste
what is sporadic nd endemic, epidemic
Aminu Reply
the significance of food webs for disease transmission
Abreham
food webs brings about an infection as an individual depends on number of diseased foods or carriers dully.
Mark
explain assimilatory nitrate reduction
Esinniobiwa Reply
Assimilatory nitrate reduction is a process that occurs in some microorganisms, such as bacteria and archaea, in which nitrate (NO3-) is reduced to nitrite (NO2-), and then further reduced to ammonia (NH3).
Elkana
This process is called assimilatory nitrate reduction because the nitrogen that is produced is incorporated in the cells of microorganisms where it can be used in the synthesis of amino acids and other nitrogen products
Elkana
Examples of thermophilic organisms
Shu Reply
Give Examples of thermophilic organisms
Shu
advantages of normal Flora to the host
Micheal Reply
Prevent foreign microbes to the host
Abubakar
they provide healthier benefits to their hosts
ayesha
They are friends to host only when Host immune system is strong and become enemies when the host immune system is weakened . very bad relationship!
Mark
what is cell
faisal Reply
cell is the smallest unit of life
Fauziya
cell is the smallest unit of life
Akanni
ok
Innocent
cell is the structural and functional unit of life
Hasan
is the fundamental units of Life
Musa
what are emergency diseases
Micheal Reply
There are nothing like emergency disease but there are some common medical emergency which can occur simultaneously like Bleeding,heart attack,Breathing difficulties,severe pain heart stock.Hope you will get my point .Have a nice day ❣️
_Adnan
define infection ,prevention and control
Innocent
I think infection prevention and control is the avoidance of all things we do that gives out break of infections and promotion of health practices that promote life
Lubega
Heyy Lubega hussein where are u from?
_Adnan
en français
Adama
which site have a normal flora
ESTHER Reply
Many sites of the body have it Skin Nasal cavity Oral cavity Gastro intestinal tract
Safaa
skin
Asiina
skin,Oral,Nasal,GIt
Sadik
How can Commensal can Bacteria change into pathogen?
Sadik
How can Commensal Bacteria change into pathogen?
Sadik
all
Tesfaye
by fussion
Asiina
what are the advantages of normal Flora to the host
Micheal
what are the ways of control and prevention of nosocomial infection in the hospital
Micheal
what is inflammation
Shelly Reply
part of a tissue or an organ being wounded or bruised.
Wilfred
what term is used to name and classify microorganisms?
Micheal Reply
Binomial nomenclature
adeolu
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Source:  OpenStax, Online humanities scholarship: the shape of things to come. OpenStax CNX. May 08, 2010 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11199/1.1
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