Rosetta Disk For 10K-Year History 212
fleener writes: "The BBC reports and SiliconValley.com comments on the Rosetta Disk, a 2" nickel nano-analog, optical storage disk that records text and images at densities up to 350,000 pages per disk, designed to last 10,000 years. It will be unveiled at the 10,000 year Library Conference, in a discussion of how to store our history and culture for the future, given that current digital storage formats degrade quickly and are platform dependent. The prototype contains the first three chapters of Genesis, in 1,000 languages. What information do you think is valuable and relevant to give future archaeologists?"
Re:Discernability (Score:1)
Waste (Score:1)
What a waste of storage. Why not all the Subgenius that's fit to print?
-------------------------------------------------
Windows (Score:1)
They should archive the fact that Windows had bugs in it, because it's possible that Windows 12000 will be bug free. We mustn't let the younger generations forget the things we went through to bring them stable computing.
Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it.- George Santayana
Re:Genesis?!? (Score:1)
Re:language (Score:1)
Re:Encyclopaedia Brittanica (Score:1)
Technology and the human animal. (Score:2)
We have lived for half a century with technology enabling us to wreak complete destruction on ourselves and our environment, yet we have demonstrated a similar capacity to work towards a common good. This has, to a large degree, defined us as a people and how we cope with these technologies will form an important part of our historical legasy. Which facet of the human animal will win out in the end is unclear, and how we will apply this technology to solving our current problems will be for historians of the future to determine.
Re:OSM (Score:1)
How would I stop it? Well...I could ask nicely. (Would that have stopped OSM? Hmm...I really doubt it...be real here.) No...I'd probably call in the "evil establishment" government of ours...who would probably resolve it by dispatching an officer to investigate. I am glad that option exists personally.
Timing... (Score:1)
--
Re:The true test of free speech (Score:1)
The quote attributed to Voltaire above was actually paraphrased by C.S. Tallentyre
Thank you for the correction. I have had difficulty finding definitive confirmation. The best I could do was this comment
from this site [tamos.net]. Maybe I'll have to break down and go to a physical library. *smile*
Rosetta disk? Think Rosetta stone! (Score:2)
Re:platform dependant (Score:2)
Re:OSM (Score:1)
Why won't the Earth last? In an equation: (Score:2)
(fission, fusion, or antimatter, it doesn't look too good for a planet with a technological society on it)
Get a grip... (Score:1)
Grow up...
Re:What needs to be included (Score:1)
Re:Is 10,000 years long enough? (Score:1)
What to put on there? (Score:3)
All the Metallica songs, in MP3 format?
Re:How will they read it? (Score:3)
what to store (Score:1)
2. hello world
5. philosophy (what we think of atom bombs and feudalism and many of the original wirtings) 4. scientific knowledge (how to build atom bombs and the like)
3. history (what our civilization looks like and what we have found out about the past)
6. manymany comments of all the people who liked to write some (without filtering them
7. culture: show them what we've got, what we like! How we express and celebrate, fine lyrics, drawings, theatre and everything that is not too boring on a "static, nano-carved" disc
I consider the personal comments the most important cause I disklike the standard view of our society (modern, good, sensible, fair) and want to tell my view.
Wired? (Score:1)
Re:OSM (Score:1)
Re:Whatever happened to beer? (Score:1)
DNA, physics constants, stuff not to be patented.. (Score:1)
Decimal system.
We should include male + female DNA + blueprints for sperm and egg, for various popular creatures including humans
And some physics constants+measurements just to see if things changed
Some stuff about our various cultures. newsprints, magazines, with rankings for fiction, nonfiction, debatable etc
Guiness book of records maybe - so we can see the limitations, and what are regarded as "achievements".
If possible the sort of stuff that was holographically stored in the alien ship in Arthur C Clark's Rendezvous with Rama.
And tons of stuff which should not be patented again- talk about prior art
Cheerio,
Link.
Re:How will they read it? (Score:1)
20/20 hindsight (Score:1)
While we cannot make a perfect decision about what to record for our decendants/replacements, we can make an educated guess. Go to your local book store. Look for books on aboriginal people. Count the number of books in the following subjects: art, religion, technology and history. You should find that the most common subject is history, followed by art, religion and technology. Repeat for Phonecians, Greeks, Chinese and Europeans.
How should this guide our decisions when makeing such and artifact as the Rosetta Disk? I would propose that we give them that which we value in our own ancestors.
We should explain our history. Let our future archeologists understand us through our history, maybe (wistful thinking, I know) they will avoid some of our mistakes. Give them dates, give them events. They will find artifacts, so why not give them a context with which to understand those artifacts?
As for art: what is the one remnant of 'cave-men' everyone is aware of? Paintings and arrow heads. Art is universal. A child can understand a painting. Art stands on it's own merits.
Religion, philosophy and technology I group together. Why? Not because I think of them as alike in any way, rather, I imagine that a 10,000 year distant archeologist would have trouble distiguishing them. We don't have all of the answers, and these three diciplines all attempt to answer the same fundamental questions. In 10,000 years, we have come from no philosophy to metaphysics. We've come from arrowheads to high yield laser guided nuclear bombs. We've come from huge, impersonal, hierarchical, bumbling religion to...huge, impersonal, hierarchical, bumbling religion. And hell, why should we bother explaining the difference? We should just present them as different theories addressing the same issue.
P.S.: These damn things will not last if they're on the earth. Terra Firma is awful on artifacts. The ice caps, mountain tops or the moon might not be bad ideas. My vote goes for the moon. Why? Because we can make it highly visible. Just imagine a few high albedo plains aranged in a straight line, like an elipsis... It would at least give tourists something to see if society doesn't collapse. And any developing society would know what to do when they got to the moon, if they got to 1960-ish technology.
I love Genesis- especially the title album. (Score:1)
What? You meant the book from the bible, not the album? Oh. Sorry.
Re:What needs to be included (Score:1)
Another thing they could include is "everything", the website! What other place offers exterme insite into the way a geek thinks, about absolutely everything? Everything2 as well
Re:What needs to be included (Score:1)
Re:Genesis?!? (Score:1)
Wow, that's just like I said above. Yes I know that the three semitic-based religions believed the story, and yes I know it is pre-everything. Genesis exists in one form or another in most semitic texts. The Quran may not have it in the same form.
Now to my point. There is more wisdom than genesis out there. Whatever you may make of the story of Adam(adapu) and eve(forgot for the moment), there are other things that are honestly christian, muslim, judaic, buddhist, etc. I agree with your statment towards linguistics. It would give them one heckuva rosetta stone.
platform dependant (Score:1)
You still need a protocol or method of decoding/encoding the data. Granted standard IDE HD's with a FAT file system are platform dependant, but who can't get the specs on them and use them for whatever?
Re:Genesis?!? (Score:1)
The Talmud and the Quran are both important, as is the new Testament of the bible in defining their respective groups. To state we don't need anything else because we have a creation myth is an argument based on shaky ground indeed. Keep in mind that these religions keep this story as a tradition and a myth, not as literal truth. To some fundies, the earth is 6,000 years old. This doesn't even jive when you consider there are stories even older still than the first recorded semitic histories (in the talmud)
Anyways, here's hoping they don't get to centered on one or two points of view..
Bible (Score:2)
Hey, CmdrTaco:
If you're going to post a link to Genesis, please post one that isn't so thoroughly flawed. ;-)
The King James version of the Bible has been shown, time and again, to contain hundreds of translation and transcription errors. It's study should be relegated to historians and theologians, not average Christians.
Probably the cleanest Christian rendering is the New International Version. However, being Jewish, I'll stick with the Jewsih Publication Society's version! *grin*
Follow this link [breslov.com] to an excellent translation of the Bible.Cheers!
~wmaheriv
Useful Information (Score:1)
There was recently (a few years back) an architectural design contest for storage of radioactive waste. The idea was to design a container that would not only last tens of thousands of years, but transmit (by it's structure - since no language used today will still be around - almost certainly) that the contents are dangerous - "Keep Out!"
There should be some interesting ideas from this contest that would help these Rosetta Disk folks make sure that someone actually figures out what this thing is for.
Now where is that URL...?
Re:Genesis??? (Score:1)
--
"HORSE."
Bible is a no-brainer choice (Score:2)
tangent - art and creation are a higher purpose
What to store? (Score:1)
Re:What to put on it? (Score:2)
Re:Why Genesis? (Score:1)
Re:OSM (Score:1)
Your right... (Score:1)
You need to follow your own advice in the future
Re:Why won't the Earth last? In an equation: (Score:1)
Of course the earth will be around for billions of years. It's so huge that we can't hope to even deviate it from its course, let alone destroy it.
Re:OSM (Score:1)
I mean that as a genuine question. You are in possession of no more facts than the rest of us, yet you won't even open to the possibility that there is something to this. Why?
I know what to store for the future! (Score:1)
Re:What to put on it? (Score:1)
10,000 years, huh? (Score:2)
Re:Check out "Deep Time" by Gregory Benford... (Score:1)
The point is this: there is no way for us to know what future generations will want to learn about us, so we can only hope they'll find enough 1990's trendiness in this to make it interesting for them.
Or consider this: to us, the fall of the Berlin Wall was a monumentous experience. But over a long period, it won't be important. "Thousands of years ago, there was a 50yrs cold war going on..there was a wall and then it fell and the war was over." Doesn't the 100 years war between England and France seem insignificant to us now, after only 5, 600 years?
This endeavour will only benefit our ego's. "See, we've left our mark." 10000 years from now, humans will be studying AOL cd's (as another poster pointed out), and they will consider them to be much more important as artifacts of late 20th century life than any Bill Joy article or time capsule.
A footnote in history. (Score:1)
Go watch futurama, see how they screwed it up?
Re:How will they read it? (Score:2)
...oops, wrong subject
Doh! 10K (Score:1)
Re:How will they read it? (Score:1)
Meesa be thinking yousa should be reading the link [longnow.org] before commenting.
Re:Why make it so small!?? (Score:1)
Definition of a language? (Score:1)
Re:language (Score:1)
Re:Genesis??? (Score:1)
Yes, but are people still studying them?
Genesis is important, not just for its age, but for the influence it has had upon Judaism, and by extension, the rest of Western Civilisation.
It is still avidly discussed and studied, and will continue to be so long as there are Jews in the world.
Oh, and whilst I'm on the subject- Genesis is widely regarded by us Jews as being alegorical. Chances are very good that it was ^never^ taken literally. It certainly isn't now, save in the most extreme personalities.
For all of you who are bashing it as 'quaint mythology,' I challenge you to read it objectively and with an open mind. It is filled with valuable lessons, and thousands of books have been written expounding upon these lessons. Genesis is there to teach us things that few are patient or honest enough to hear...
I, for one, applaud their choice of Genesis. I only hope they include a good commentary with it, just in case our descendants don't "get it" any better than the average /.er *grin*
~wmaheriv
Re:Is 10,000 years long enough? (Score:1)
Phaistos Disk (Score:3)
Re:Definition of a language? (Score:1)
Mutual comprehensibility is usually the benchmark. Language has an additional problem, though: comprehensibility isn't transitive. For example, apparently Romanians can understand Italian, but Italians can't understand Romanian.
We spent a whole day on this in my Typology class. It's a mess.
1000 languages? (Score:1)
than 200 languages on planet earth.
This includes navajo, strange
african dialects and south american
indio dialects.
Well, just read that in Scientific
American, german version, some 10
years ago...
Any idea?
angel'o'sphere
Re:Why make it so small!?? (Score:1)
schoolkids may rejoice
Re:Genesis?!? (Score:1)
It's is also one of the most widely distributed texts in the world. Since the disk is to be used to help future linguist figure out what will then be dead languages, using a widley known text will help emmencely.
Will Genesis be around in 10,000 years? I don't know. But it is more likely to survive then the latest copy of wired.
Ignorance alert -- This question will display my ignorance of the Jewish theology --
Isn't Genesis in the Quran?
Re:Genesis??? (Score:1)
Re:1000 languages? (Score:2)
Re:Genesis??? (Score:1)
I think a 9-meter tall slab of black rock, situated in a major crater like Tycho would be more obvious.
k.
--
"In spite of everything, I still believe that people
are really good at heart." - Anne Frank
Re:Genesis?!? (Score:1)
Ba Gua (Score:2)
Otherwise, put it ancient chinese/egyptian hieroglyphics makes more sense ^_^
Rebooting Civilization (Score:1)
I wonder how big the kernel would have to be? :^)
(please leave your Civ jokes at the door)
Re:Genesis??? (Score:2)
Why would it not be considered one?
Re:Genesis?!? (Score:2)
Future conversation: (Score:2)
Re:Your right... (Score:2)
I do not agree with Chiasmus_, and am not trying to defend him - simply giving a reason why your generalisation may be true.
In fact, looking at the responses to Chiasmus_, I wonder if s/he was a troll.
tangent - art and creation are a higher purpose
Re:Genesis??? (Score:2)
Stop and think for just a second before flying off the handle. You're giving the rest of us atheists a bad name.
Obviously, you didn't watch Gall Force. (Score:2)
On second thought, forget that, go watch Gunbuster. They turn Jupiter into one big bomb and nuke the galaxy center!
In all seriousness, you're thinking of 1950's weapons. What do you think people will be fighting with 10,000 years from now?
If you think humans will never have the capability to destroy planets, you're not thinking far enough ahead. I think we could easily build a single bomb that would crack the crust and kill everything on the planet right now, in fact, I think we could have built it since the 1960's. Once we get going on the antimatter thing, we'll probably be able to vaporize the planet with one bomb.
Personally, I think we'll eventually cut up all the planets to build space stations. You get a hell of a lot more living space that way.
Alternatively... (Score:2)
Nick
Check out "Deep Time" by Gregory Benford... (Score:2)
Things like: most media don't survive, languages rarely last 1000 years intact, and so forth.
Even if you could preserve the medium ( a disk, or
whatever ), another problem is, of course, how to read the darned thing.
The book also mentions the *inadvertent* communications that occur across millennia. Like the contents of prehistoric garbage heaps and so forth.
It's an interesting problem.
shall
News flash (Score:3)
Ironically, the officials in charge of the project decided to use the disk anyway.
What to put on it? (Score:4)
carlos
10,000 years later (Score:2)
Suggestion for the time capsule (Score:3)
Reruns of "I Love Lucy."
I'm serious. It was the first television program to be prerecorded before broadcast, thus it was in turn the first show to go into syndication and has been available as re-runs for decades now. Turn on your 150 channel tv right now amd there's a pretty good chance that at least one of those channels is running "I Love Lucy" right now.
I don't even like the show that much, but in many ways television defined the leisure life of most people in the industrialized world in the last half of the twentieth century, and I think "I Love Lucy" is an excellent artifact of this era.
It would also give a decent -- flawed, but decent -- view of what a typical urban lifestyle was like for the era, not just in writing, but in movement, speech, and setting. All told, archaeologists of 10,000 years from now could do a whole lot worse. Consider all those styrofoam McDonald's boxes, for example. Surely a sitcom is just a little bit kinder than that.
I'm not sure if this storage medium is capable (in a useful way) of storing video data, but if it is, this is my vote...
Do we really expect the earth to exist that long? (Score:2)
What Information's Useful? (Score:2)
2) Recordings of calls to tech support.
3) A thread containing Blizzard's excuses for the poor performance of Diablo II.
4) The Starr Report.
5) Any thread on
6) pr0n. Lots of it.
We are the first generation capable of demonstrating to our distant descendants exactly how thoroughly stupid we were. So let's do it.
Is 10,000 years long enough? (Score:2)
Re:OSM (Score:2)
Christ that thesis is choice! Damn you, I hurt myself laughing!
How happy you must be at home. You must love your charming and creative "wife" deeply.
Yours WDK - WKiernan@concentric.net
A language is a dialect... (Score:2)
I seriously doubt it's in the 6k range. People have the bad habit of counting regional dialects as a language
instead of stating that it's dialectic. It's like calling 'redneck' or 'ebonics', languages.
I could communicate, albeit awkwardly, with portuguese speaking friends using my high school spanish. Probably the same is true for Dutch and German. However, I can't understand a word of a lot of English speakers from the deep US south or from the Carribean. I can understand speakers of BAE (Black American English), despite their having grafted some grammatical structures from west african languages onto English.
To tally the number of "languages" that exist, you really have to look at the number of dialects that have specific government support and bodies that advocate normative standards (like the French parliament).
Re:Genesis??? (Score:2)
Well, for one thing, it's a piece of text you can easily find in several hundred high quality translations. This can make it possible for future scholars to reconstruct texts that are in English for a world were everyone speaks a derivative of some future dominant language. Remember modern English has only existed about five or six hundred years; English texts from 1500 CE are barely readable to a modern speaker. This period is 1/20th, and a lot can happen to a language's career in this time. Latin, Greek, Persian and Egyption may have seemed like the inevitable long term winners at various times in history, yet somehow we end up with a dominant worldwide language today which is descended from none of these.
Re:The true test of free speech (Score:2)
The beer guy has completely worn out his thing (hey, I like ASCII art and I like beer but it's plain worn out, OK?). But to say that osm "doesn't say anything at all" is so howlingly wrong that I wonder you can get it out your mouth. The clear fact, indeed the very thing that makes him a redeyed menace to his neighbors near and far, is that osm is downright logorrhaeic.
I know this for sure personally because he lives in the same town as me, and his wife Amy is friends with my wife, she's told her about his obsessive wordification. "He just goes on and on," Amy says, "I think it's cute," (she would, they're newlyweds) "but sometimes I wonder if maybe Warren does have a screw or two loose."
Yours WDK - WKiernan@concentric.net
Re:Genesis??? (Score:4)
The reason to choose the bible, I expect, is not one of cultural relevance, or religious bigotry, but merely the fact that it's already been translated into more languages than any other document on the planet.
The predictions I have heard suggest that within a century there will be less than 20 languages spoken worldwide - languages are dying out [theonion.com] very quickly. For languages that have written forms, we can at least try to preserve them for the future. I think that other items of cultural significance will be probably be all too present archaelogically, but having all these languages in one place will be invaluable to future historical linguists as the rosetta stone was to the historical linguists and archaeologists of the past.
Why make it so small!?? (Score:4)
Or why not just put it on a server in sealand and pay up the next 100,000 years of hosting.
Re:Genesis??? (Score:3)
The fine print in the article mentioned that not only Genesis, but other creation myths, up to and including the Big Bang theory, be recorded and translated.
The goal is to provide - in as many languages as possible - a set of boilerplate text, at least one instance of which is likely to survive 10,000 years.
Creation myths are among the most enduring of human stories. They're compact and easily-understood by humans, and we have existence proofs that they can be passed down over the millennia, even without advanced technology.
As such, if your core audience is "humans 10000 years from now", they're ideal material for a "Rosetta Stone" project.
The inclusion of the Big Bang (and/or hyperinflation theory, etc) is also a wise idea. The absence of theories beyond this level precisely dates the "stone" as "no older than the early 21st century". (After all, had it been written in the 43rd century, they'd have realized the universe really is "all turtles, all the way down!", and written their Stone accordingly :-)
I say "make a million of 'em, scatter 'em around the planet, drop a few over Antarctica, and stick one on every soft-landing space probe we build from this day forward."
(Aside: I really like the space probe idea. We screw up and our civilization collapses, BFD. Once our descendants develop spaceflight, they'll know we were here, and they'll know when we were here. I can't think of a better place than the Moon for long-term preservation of micro-etched materials, and we know that big hunks of metal on extraterrestrial bodies will be the first things explored once our descendants develop the technology to detect them. Luna:WesternCiv::Desert:AncientEgypt)
Discernability (Score:4)
Digging up this item out of the rest of the techno-rubble, it would just look like a magnet or other piece of machinary. To be useful it must visibly represent information to the naked eye, without thousands of levels of magnification.
Perhaps if it had some text large enough to read, then more text was embedded within those letters, etc, so that a casual observer would realize there is additional information, and would go through the trouble of magnifying and discovering just how much.
If the creators are counting on the significance of the object to be retained for 10,000 years, as it sits in a time capsule or clean room, they're mistaken. Besides, if this was the case, all the data encoded on the object could just as easily be stored digitally, along with the equipment needed to read it.
It would make more sense to have a series of diagrams explaining binary code and its conversion into unicode characters, audio waves, and pixel representations, then have a digital stream which can contain multimedia which has all the translation information as well as multimedia information on the actual pronunciation of dialects, etc.
Kevin Fox
Proprietary format+EULA means no one can read it! (Score:2)
Advice from the Suicidal (Score:2)
With any luck, future civilizations will be evolved enough when they find any such records to recognize that they don't want to take advice from a bunch of screw-ups like us. After all, if we manage to dissapear, it will almost certainly be at our own hand. What makes us think our advice or knowledge will be anything but a curse to hypothetical future civilizations?
Genesis?!? (Score:2)
Ohh, this is a great idea. Could we instead leave something useful for future generations?
If there is an apocalypse and humanity needs a record of the past, wouldn't it be handier to include something other than a record of who begat who?
I'd personally rather have a nice set of instructions on how to be decadent [subgenius.com] than listen to some 4,000 year old skewed version of reality.
-Peter
Unfortunately... (Score:2)
I stated nothing about the bible's truth/falsehood (Score:2)
The only thing I was trying to state is that in general, when naming texts of significance in human history, the Bible is one that takes little thought to name for westerners, as it is in the popular conscience, where as most important texts are not (hands up who knows what a Veda is). This states nothing about the truth or falsehood of the bible.
I have put a large amount of thought into the possibility the Bible could be true, thank you very much - I was raised a Christian for a fair few years. You are reading things into my statements I have not said.
tangent - art and creation are a higher purpose
Rosetta Disk? (Score:2)
Genesis??? (Score:3)
If we actually want to leave an indicator of our culture, WHY, WHY would we leave the text of a book that's thousands of years old?? Why would we want to leave a book specific only to Western religions? Why would we want to leave it in several different Romance languages? Do you think future civilations and/or space aliens are really going to have an easier time with French than Spanish, or Italian? Why give them 300 ciphers when we could give them, say, 3 or 4?
And, I know I might be offending peoples' religious sensibilities here, but WHY THE HELL do we want to look like our society had never discovered the scientific method and instead based all its dogma and beliefs on guesswork???
Fuck, Fuck, Fuck!
Re:Genesis??? (Score:2)
1000 languages if they could figure one of them out. It all kind of
assumes that they will be able to figure out the point of shiny 2"
disks with lots of tiny pits arranged in a helix...
What needs to be included (Score:2)
1. Some sort of reader, made from extremely durable equipment. This reader must have the capability to display the information on a screen and on printout (thermal transfer, probably) so that people can decode the information.
2. Some sort of power source. A solar cell, or somethign along these lines would work well. It should not require any fuel from outside the time capsule.
3. Some sort of simple language guide, such as the one placed on various deep-space probes which helps with the number system and various mathematical operands. Combined with a pictographical system equating words to images, this could teach the language to far-future archeaologists and allow them to figure out the rest of the system.
4. Any easy interface. We're not talking E or Sawfish here; the system will need to be web-browser like but extremely simple and offer pictographical hints for difficult words.
Any other ideas about what would be required for usage of this disc?
Re:Genesis??? (Score:2)
For really old written stuff, check out the Sumerian, Egyptian, Indian, and Chinese cultures. I'm probably missing a bunch of other old cultures, but you get the point.