Wednesday, May 23, 2007

The Answer Machine (1964)


Violet Gaze sent in these great images from the 1964/1971 book Childcraft Vol. 6 How Things Change. The paleo-future view of education was exceptionally accurate compared to a lot of other predictions. The homework machine envisioned in 1981 was big, but not altogether wrong.

My favorite element of this two-page spread is the fact that the girl has a hyper-futuristic "answer machine" and yet still uses a typewriter.

See also:
Homework in the Future (1981)
The Road Ahead: Future Classroom (1995)
Closer Than We Think! (1958-1963)
Connections: AT&T's Vision of the Future (Part 7, 1993)
Project 2000 - Apple Computer (1988)

4 comments:

Paul M. Cray said...

The future is tricky because everything is joined together. Change one thing and everything else changes. But when he think about the future it's easier to imagine adding one cool new feature (an artificial intelligence answer machine) and leaving everything else (the typewriter, the clothes) pretty much the same. One of my favourite examples of "Getting It So Wrong, It's Right" is Kelly Freas's cover for Murray Leinster's "The Pirates of Ersatz" in the February 1959 "Astounding Science Fiction" (http://www.noosfere.com/showcase/IMAGES/AST_5902.jpg) showing a space pirate clamber about to clamber into an airlock, blaster in hand and slide rule clenched firmly between his teeth. Well, he might have to do some tricky astrogational calculation once the ship has been captured.

Jorgemán said...

I recall having read, maybe in The Jargon File, about an early prototype of a machine to write in a TV screen via a typewriter. Not like a modern (or even old) computer, forget about memory or processors, you just type and the letters appear in the screen.

Anonymous said...

actually, this one is called google today :)

Brandy said...

OMG, this reminded me of Married With Children, where they got a computer.

Kelly says, "I typed in 'Ishmael'. And you know what it told me? 'Ishamel'!"