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Information loss from technological progress

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conference contribution
posted on 2025-05-11, 10:11 authored by P. D. Townsend
Progress in electronics and optics offers faster computers, and rapid communication via the internet that is matched by ever larger and evolving storage systems. Instinctively one assumes that this must be totally beneficial. However advances in software and storage media are progressing in ways which are frequently incompatible with earlier systems and the economics and commercial pressures rarely guarantee total compatibility with earlier systems. Instead, the industries actively choose to force the users to purchase new systems and software. Thus we are moving forward with new technological variants that may have access to only the most recent systems and we will have lost earlier alternatives. The reality is that increased processing speed and storage capacity are matched by an equally rapid decline in the access and survival lifetime of older information. This pattern is not limited to modern electronic systems but is evident throughout history from writing on stone and clay tablets to papyrus and paper. It is equally evident in image systems from painting, through film, to magnetic tapes and digital cameras. In sound recording we have variously progressed from wax discs to vinyl, magnetic tape and CD formats. In each case the need for better definition and greater capacity has forced the earlier systems into oblivion. Indeed proposed interactive music systems could similarly relegate music CDs to specialist collections. The article will track some of the examples and discuss the consequences as well as noting that this information loss is further compounded by developments in language and changes in cultural views of different societies.

History

Source title

Journal of Physics: Conference Series, Volume 558

Name of conference

18th International School on Condensed Matter Physics

Location

Varna, Bulgaria

Start date

2014-09-01

End date

2014-09-06

Publisher

Institute of Physics (IOP)

Place published

Bristol, UK

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science

School

School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences

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