Navigation
  • Home
  • Recent
  • Most Active
  • Popular
  • Blog
  • Credits
  • RSS
  •   Interaction
  • Register
  • Statistics
  •   Help
  • Suggestions
  • Contact Us
  • How to Edit
  • Help



  • [Edit]



    Theodor Holm Nelson is an American sociologist, philosopher, and pioneer of information technology. He was born June 17, 1937. He coined the term "hypertext" in 1963 and published it in 1965. He also is credited with first use of the words hypermedia, transclusion, virtuality, intertwingularity and teledildonics. The main thrust of his work has been to make computers easily accessible to ordinary people. His motto is:

    A user interface should be so simple that a beginner in an emergency can understand it within ten seconds.


    Ted Nelson leads his life according to his four maxims: "most people are fools, most authority is malignant, God does not exist, and everything is wrong".


        Ted Nelson
            Career
            Education and awards
            Bibliography

    top

    Career
    Nelson founded Project Xanadu in 1960 with the goal of creating a computer network with a simple user interface. The effort is documented in his 1974 book Computer Lib/Dream Machines and the 1981 Literary Machines. Much of his adult life has been devoted to working on Xanadu and advocating it.

    The Xanadu project itself failed to flourish, for a variety of reasons which are disputed. Journalist Gary Wolf published an unflattering history, The Curse of Xanadu*, on Nelson and his project in the June, 1995 issue of Wired magazine. Nelson expressed his disgust on his website*, referring to Wolf as a "Gory Jackal", and threatened to sue him.

    Some aspects of its vision are in the process of being fulfilled by Tim Berners-Lee's invention of the World Wide Web. The Web owes much of its inspiration to Xanadu, but Nelson dislikes the World Wide Web, XML and all embedded markup, and regards Berners-Lee's work as a gross over-simplification of his own work:

    HTML is precisely what we were trying to PREVENT— ever-breaking links, links going outward only, quotes you can't follow to their origins, no version management, no rights management. – Ted Nelson (Ted Nelson one-liners)


    Nelson is working on a new information structure, ZigZag, which is described on the Xanadu project website, which also hosts two versions of the Xanadu code.

    He is currently a philosopher and visiting professor at Oxford University working in the fields of information, computers, and human-machine interfaces.

    top

    Education and awards
    Nelson earned a Bachelor's degree in philosophy from Swarthmore College in 1959, a Master's degree in sociology from Harvard University in 1963 and a Doctorate in Media and Governance from Keio University in 2002.

    In 1998, at the Seventh WWW Conference in Brisbane, Australia, Ted was awarded the Yuri Rubinsky Memorial Award. He told the audience that it was the first award that he had ever received for his work.

    In 2001 he was knighted by France as "Officier des Arts et Lettres". In 2004 he was appointed as a Fellow of Wadham College, Oxford, and associated with the Oxford Internet Institute, where he is currently conducting his research.

    He is the son of the late Emmy Award-winning director Ralph Nelson and the Academy Award-winning actress Celeste Holm. His ethnicity is primarily Norwegian-American.

    top

    Bibliography
      Life, Love, College, etc. (1959)
      Computer Lib: You can and must understand computers now/Dream Machines: New freedoms through computer screens—a minority report (1974), Microsoft Press, rev. edition 1987: ISBN 0-914845-49-7
      The Home Computer Revolution (1977)
      Literary Machines: The report on, and of, Project Xanadu concerning word processing, electronic publishing, hypertext, thinkertoys, tomorrow's intellectual... including knowledge, education and freedom (1981), Mindful Press, Sausalito, California, 1981 edition: ISBN 0-89347-052-X , 1988 edition: ISBN 0-89347-055-4 , 1993 edition: ISBN 0-89347-056-2
      The Future of Information (1997)

     
    Search more:
     

       
    Source Privacy License Download Contact Us Atlas
    Scientus.org Dictionary (Yet Another Wiki) RC : 1.39
    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ted Nelson". link