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- WHEN IS THE HOME COMPUTER?
-
- by Noel Fuller
-
- Our amigas are generally assigned to the species: `personal computer'. As such
- they fall into a number of sub-categories:
-
- A useless object that keeps a retired husband out of the way, a games machine
- to keep the kids in a known and controlled location, an object that absorbs
- money with little observable benefit, something that wastes a lot of time more
- usefully spent elsewhere, a threatening invasion from the unknown - best kept
- out of sight, an adjunct to his or her business, an expensive typewriter, a
- convenient word processor, etc and so forth to various levels of usefulness or
- uselessness relative to the observer..
-
- Definition: A home computer is a device which serves the interests of everyone
- in the residence in some direct way.
-
- Corollary: A home computer is easily accessible to everyone in the residence.
-
- Objection: If the computer is useful when do I get a chance to log on and how
- long for?
-
- Solution A: Everyone has a personal computer - affluence?
-
- Solution B: The home has a work station with several terminals.
-
- Solution C: Where two or three are gathered together they can take turns.
-
- While there are many who have good and sufficient reason to keep the computer
- to themselves I notice that some of the best supported computers, finances
- permitting, occupy a position convenient to all, usually in the lounge or some
- much frequented place. If easily accessible from the kitchen it may include a
- recipe database along with databases relating to various club, educational or
- voluntary activities as well as commerce. A desktop publisher, art programs, a
- good printer and wordprocessor serve to produce newsheets, periodicals, forms,
- promotional materials, christmas cards, whatever, while those whose output is
- better served through the serial port also have a suitable cluster of software
- and hardware. These computers may be centers of diverse creative activity.
-
- The computer coupled with fax/modem is increasingly becoming the core of a
- business run in part or wholly from home but this computer is unlikely to be
- available to too many other persons.
-
- So the time is not too far away, when it may be normal to have a home
- workstation. It is in fact inevitable because of the inexorable tendency to
- integrate communications and relate applications, a process in which the
- general purpose multitasking capability of a good computer is central. This
- process has long been underway in industrial, scientific and military
- establishments and is bringing about substantial alterations in travel, social
- and residential patterns. Already databases maintained by government agencies
- are beginning to be made accessible to individuals, even in New Zealand. Look
- for increasing evidence of this. The most obvious areas that will affect every
- home eventually will be telephone and business directories, the electoral
- roles, public libraries, goods & services, encyclopedia and dictionay
- databases in many languages - electronic trade & exchange, travel & tourist
- information, charts and maps, current entertainment listings. Governments and
- government departments may be required to maintain some public databases. All
- this is already going on locally, nationally and internationally and has been
- for years. The new thing is that all this will be accessible from the home
- with increasing ease and universality. There is developing an accompanying
- shift in work patterns and human relations.
-
- If governments, educators and industries, particularly communications and
- promotion industries are not already preparing for this development they may
- be caught out badly. Financial sectors may be already very close to being able
- to cope with `resident access' if I may coin a buzz word.
-
- So, how useful is your computer? How aware are you of what it or its general
- species can do or may be able to do affordably very soon?
-