This book explores the history of hypertext, an influential
concept that forms the underlying structure of the World Wide Web
and innumerable software applications. Barnet combines an analysis
of contemporary literature with her exclusive interviews with those
at the forefront of the hypertext innovation. She tells both the
human and the technological story, tracing its path back to an
analogue device imagined by Vannevar Bush in 1945, before modern
computing had happened.
'Memory Machines' offers an expansive record of hypertext over
the last 60 years, pinpointing the major breakthroughs and
fundamental flaws in its evolution. Barnet argues that some of the
earliest hypertext systems were more richly connected and in some
respects more flexible than the Web; this is also a fascinating
account of the paths not taken.
Barnet ends the journey through computing history at the birth
of mass domesticated hypertext, at the point that it grew out of
the university labs and into the Web. And yet she suggests that
hypertext may not have completed its evolutionary story, and may
still have the capacity to become something different, something
much better than it is today.
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