It was 1994. C++ programmers had been introducing themselves into my life for sometime. The most interesting was Matthew.
Matthew had grown up on a commune, the son of a Philosophy Professor (Dad) and a recognized Artist (Mum).
Silicon Valley had snagged Matthew because he had something most C++ Programmers didn’t have–a creative imagination that astounded.
Like me, Matthew was drawn to puzzles, especially to new things that might have widespread implications. In front of a computer, Matthew and I became enthralled children.
One of the things I especially wanted to make the computer do was video conference. I’m not sure why, but I felt compelled.
Matthew worked out how to do audio/video communications quickly. Within a hour the card was installed and set up. In a minute we had a very snowy image of a student from UCal. The student and I talked about Economics. Canada was still in a recession, but the U.S was starting to recover. The student felt the Canadian economy would follow shortly.
Next, we contacted two people on a yacht in South Pacific. At first I didn’t believe we could be connecting to a boat on the ocean, but Matthew understood how the connection was being made. That conversation was about an impending storm. The video was snowy, but I could see them in the cockpit.
Lastly, we got a American Student in the Middle East. I listened intently as he described the hardships caused to ordinary people by embargoes, while political leaders remained unaffected. No video this time, just a very American voice.
I sat and thought about it a little while.
I was dumbfounded…
What this meant was that we could speak to people we didn’t know, anywhere in the world, and ask them exactly what was happening, in real time.
It was clear this was going to change politics, economics, communications industries…everything. It had not occurred to me until that moment.
It would not surprise me if there are countless books, blogs and articles that describe this period of time as the age of innocence on the internet. I think of it that way.
The people we spoke with that day gave intelligent responses to pointed questions, They had no thought of gain, fame or branding. This was simple conversation.
Matthew and I continued to make the computer do interesting things for a while, but then I was off to University of Toronto and he was off to San Francisco.
I wish I could say I’d had some kind of ‘McLuhan-esque’ foresight regarding how it would all play out. I was certainly privy to enough clues. For the next few years the computer was nothing more to me than than a tool for writing papers.
When I tried to extrapolate possibilities, they seemed endless and I was overwhelmed.