This Is The Future
April 23rd, 2007Early in this semester when I downloaded my professor’s first lecture and listened to it on my iPod while lying in bed, I realized that I had lived to see the future.
This weeked, I was at a Chinese place, waiting for my take-away order when a group of men in motorcycle clothes walked in. They all wore matching black leather jackets. On the back of the jackets, there were patches that read, “Hired Guns Arizona.” I was curious about what that meant. Were they a private security organization? Were they a border patrol group like the Minutemen? Were they a social club? My first thought was, “I wonder if they have a web site.”
I immediately laughed at myself. It was telling of how far the World Wide Web has insinuated itself into my life if I assumed a bunch of rough-looking motorcycle riders had a web presence. I realized that, when faced with any question now, my reflex is to look it up online. I didn’t always used to be this way. But, honestly, I don’t really remember how I found answers before 1994. I assume I used books or asked people but I really can not say for sure.
Had I been standing in that Chinese restaurant in 1990 and those guys walked in, how would I have gotten any information about them? I probably would have asked around to see if anyone had heard of them. Yeah, I could have gone to the library but is there a printed directory of motorcycle organizations? What recourse would I have had other than poring over a periodical index? Looking them up in the phone book and giving them a call?
Really, how did people know anything before the World Wide Web? In just over a decade, I have come to take for granted this almost embarrassing wealth of free, easy to get data. To get information, I don’t go to my TV or my radio or even my books. I go to my computer and it’s all right there. I can almost always find any information I need at any time. I do indeed live in the future.
And, yes, they do have a web site.


