Monthly Archives: December 2010

Zen and the Art of Knowledge Maintenance, Part IV: No Bit Left Behind

Throughout history there have always been individuals in key positions making decisions about what bits of knowledge survive and what gets left behind. They were librarians, archivists, teachers, writers, publishers, producers, and sometimes government officials. Sometimes the censorship has been … Continue reading

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Zen and the Art of Knowledge Maintenance, Part III: Our Digital DNA

As I mentioned earlier, one of the best ways to preserve an idea is to share it as widely as possible. This sort of broadcasting used to cost a lot of money, back when that meant printing materials to distribute … Continue reading

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Zen and the Art of Knowledge Maintenance, Part II: Ideas Worth Spreading

It’s a simple but vital distinction: knowledge and its container are two different things. Preserving knowledge doesn’t necessarily mean keeping an old book on life support in a climate-controlled vault like a museum piece–that’s no good at all, in fact, … Continue reading

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Zen and the Art of Knowledge Maintenance, Part I: Ashes to Ashes, Zeroes to Zeroes

On my bookshelf there sits a book called Dark Ages II: When the Digital Data Die, by Bryan Bergeron. It was published in 2001, and it’s now out of print, so finding a copy of this treatise on the dangers … Continue reading

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Connecting the Dots of History

Over the past week I’ve been scanning genealogy records for one side of my family and entering the details into a GEDCOM database. I’ve now documented 873 persons from 265 families going back as far as 1475 in an unbroken … Continue reading

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