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- Newsgroups: alt.hypertext
- Path: sparky!uunet!caen!umeecs!ais.org!chungkuo
- From: chungkuo@ais.org (Shawn FitzGerald)
- Subject: Re: The Future of Hypertext
- Message-ID: <BxvtFI.10u@ais.org>
- Keywords: hypertext, online information, forecasts, predictions
- Organization: UMCC
- References: <Bxv9w2.6Br@andy.bgsu.edu>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 22:35:38 GMT
- Lines: 31
-
- There is a great deal of information out there about hypertext. There are
- also pretty much two different areas in which hypertext is used. For the
- majority of the people on the net, and most of those in this group,
- hypertext exists as a tool for technologists. Technical writers, engineers,
- and the like. There is a second group, not quite so well known, who use
- hypertext in a literary fashion.
-
- I come from the second group and will try to speak from that perspective.
- There is a wish among many of us that the use of hypertext in literature
- will catch on in a big way. Some even predict it replacing the book and
- novel as they are now known and starting a revolution of thought. Though
- many would hope for such a change, I personally don't see this happening for
- quite some time. The factors involved are numerous, and have been debated
- over in many published (published: yes; widely distributed: not really)
- essays.
-
- As for the future of hypertext. I see it sticking around in the area of
- technological writing, and collaborative engineering projects. As for those
- of us writing prose and poetry in this form...who knows? I once compared
- those of us writing fiction with hypertext to the impressionist painters. A
- brief burst of creation which did not last, but affected in some way all art
- to come. I don't know if I still believe this. At any rate, it's an
- interesting comparison (*I* think so).
-
- Call me a disgruntled hypertext writer.
-
- --
- ----------
- Shawn FitzGerald UMCC (U of M Computing Club) Michigan
- chungkuo@ais.org "Whether you are quiet and alive, or
- quiet and dead makes no difference to Cerebus."
-