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Old SF - Their lack of forethought
Message
 
To
12/09/2006 14:16:41
Dragan Nedeljkovich (Online)
Now officially retired
Zrenjanin, Serbia
General information
Forum:
Books
Category:
Science fictions
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01152743
Message ID:
01153120
Views:
26
>>>In one of Larry Niven's RingWorld books (1970+) he describes a device that is striped to your wrist like a watch. This device (I beleive) was called a Joy-box. It not only told you the time, but was your phone, access to the central computer system, and even could make you a drink, and more. When I see what is continuously being added to the PDA these day, I can not help but think of the Joy-Boxes.
>>
>>That was too late. :)
>>
>>1959, "The 100 parsec road" - short science fiction stories book:
>>
>>Victor Saparin. "The last cabman"
>>
>>Described the personal hand-held device (fits in the pocket) called "universal bloc" that provides: videophone, sound and video recording, voice recognition, book/magazine/news/any information reading ("any book can be ordered and received within 3 minutes")and movie-on-demand capabilities. Can be connected to "the printing device". "Universal blocs" are used by everybody everywhere, including on the planes. Information recording is done on "a tiny hair-like element". One of the highlighted features is transferring the sound from the device to the individual user ears wirelessly and without headphones, silently to the others (we are not there yet :) Mentioned "a thousand other things you can do with this universal bloc".
>>
>>To me it is the most complete "dream PDA" description. No coffee making capabilities though :) However, one probably can dig out other SF book references like this.
>>
>>BTW, the individual flying mashines there are contolled by mind.
>>
>>Here is the full text of the story (in Russian).
>>http://books.rusf.ru/unzip/add-on/xussr_s/saparv22.htm?1/2
>
>Благодарю!

I still have the original book. :)
Nick Neklioudov
Universal Thread Consultant
3 times Microsoft MVP - Visual FoxPro

"I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that don't work." - Thomas Edison
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