Nicholas Negroponte

American computer scientist
(Redirected from Negroponte, Nicholas)

Nicholas Negroponte (born 1 December 1943) is a Greek-American computer scientist best known as founder and director of Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Media Lab.

You can see the future best through peripheral vision.

Quotes edit

 
Scale will get you strategy.
 
Young people, I happen to believe, are the world's most precious natural resource.
  • Think of it: the lowest common denominator in being digital is not your operating system, modem, or model of computer. It's a tiny piece of plastic, designed decades ago by Bell Labs' Charles Krumreich, Edwin Hardesty, and company, who thought they were making an inconspicuous plug for a few telephone handsets. Not in their wildest dreams was Registered Jack 11 — a modular connector more commonly known as the RJ-11 — meant to be plugged and unplugged so many times, by so many people, for so many reasons, all over the world.
  • Young people, I happen to believe, are the world's most precious natural resource.
    • Pricing the Future [2].
  • You can see the future best through peripheral vision.
    • Foreword of Unleashing the Killer App: Digital Strategies for Market Dominance (Harvard Business School Press, Revised edition March 2000) ISBN 1578512611.

Being Nicholas, The Wired Interview by Thomas A. Bass edit

  • MIT is governed by a second, even higher rule: the inalienable right of academic freedom.
  • The Internet for us was like air. It was there all the time — you wouldn't notice it existed unless it was missing.
  • I've spent my whole life worrying about the human-computer interface, so I don't want to suggest that what we have today is even close to acceptable.
  • I think the Net is scaling very well. Because of the way it was designed, I don't think it will come to its knees and crash. I see it as very organic in the way it's capable of living and reproducing itself.
  • Cyberlaw is global law.
  • Unlike television — at least as it currently exists — the Internet is a medium of choice.
  • If you think about it, being digital is Italian. It's underground, provocative, interactive. It has humor, discourse, and debate. It has a kind of liveliness to it.

Being Digital (1995) edit

ISBN 0679762906

  • The change from atoms to bits is irrevocable and unstoppable. Why now? Because the change is also exponential — small differences of yesterday can have suddenly shocking consequences tomorrow.
  • True personalization is now upon us. It's not just a matter of selecting relish over mustard once. The post-information age is about acquaintance over time: machines' understanding individuals with the same degree of subtlety (or more than) we can expect from other human beings, including idiosyncrasies (like always wearing a blue-striped shirt) and totally random events, good and bad, in the unfolding narrative of our lives.
  • Personal computers will make our future adult population simultaneously more mathematically able and more visually literate. Ten years from now, teenagers are likely to enjoy a much richer panorama of options because the pursuit of intellectual achievement will not be tilted so much in favor of the bookworm, but instead cater to a wider range of cognitive styles, learning patterns, and expressive behaviors.

A 30-year history of the future, TED Talk (2014) edit

  • When you write a computer program you've got to not just list things out and sort of take an algorithm and translate it into a set of instructions. But when there's a bug — and all programs have bugs — you've got to debug it. You've got to go in, change it, and then re-execute … and you iterate. And that iteration is really a very, very good approximation of learning.

Attributed edit

  • Isn't it odd how parents grieve if their child spends six hours a day on the 'Net, but are delighted if those same hours are spent reading books?

External links edit

 
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