Fred Wilson: There Will Be No Files In The Cloud
I think Apple would agree.
On Markdown And How Technology Should Behave
One of the primary functions of computers has been, or at least should have been, to simplify tasks. Whether it be computing large sums of numbers, communicating, organizing data, or writing, the job of the computer should be to simplify and streamline these tasks.
These machines are supposed to make our lives simplier not more complicated. Yet, often we allow them to make our lives even more complex working under the assumption that they are doing what they are supposed to be doing: making our lives simplier.1
It’s easy to feel like we are always benifiting from this new feature or that new technical widget but I would suppose, un-uniquely, that this is far from the case.
So it is refreshing that once in a while one stumbles accross a technological development that does indeed operate as it should: to make our lives simplier.
Markdown Syntax is one of those manifestations of technological development that moves the needle away from complication and towards simplicity.
Markdown is:
a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).2
Here’s what that means: you can write words to publish on the internet without having to worry about code. Markdown becomes part of your writing instead of breaking it up or abstracting it. Pretty powerful stuff.3
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Facebook and its privacy controls are a perfect example of this. ↩
On the outskirts of Oxford lives a brilliant and distressingly thin physicist named David Deutsch, who believes in multiple universes and has conceived of an as yet unbuildable computer to test their existence. Deutsch, who has never held a job, is essentially the founding father of quantum computing, a field that devises distinctly powerful computers based on the branch of physics known as quantum mechanics. With one millionth of the hardware of an ordinary laptop, a quantum computer could store as many bits of information as there are particles in the universe.
