Communications. I could barely spell the word, much less comprehend its meaning. Yet when
Mrs. Rubin made the announcement about the new club she was starting at the junior high
school, it triggered something in
my mind.
Two weeks later, during the last month of my eighth grade year, I figured it out. I was
rummaging through the basement, and
I ran across the little blue box that my dad had brought home from work a year earlier.
Could this be a modem?
I asked Mrs. Rubin about it the next day at school, and when she verified my
expectations, I became the first member of
Teleport 2000, the only organization in the city dedicated to introducing students to the
information highway.
This was when 2400-baud was considered state-of-the-art, and telecommunications was still
distant from everyday life. But
as I incessantly logged onto Cleveland Freenet that summer, sending e-mail and posting
usenet news messages until my
fingers bled, I began to notice the little things. Electronic mail addresses started
popping up on business cards. Those
otherwise-incomprehensible computer magazines that my dad brought home from work ran
monthly stories on
communications-program this, and Internet-system that. Cleveland Freenet's Freeport
software began appearing on systems
all over the world, in places as far away as Finland and Germany - with free telnet
access!
I didn't live life as a normal twelve-year-old kid that summer. I sat in front of the
monitor twenty-four hours a day, eating my meals from a plate set next to the
keyboard, stopping only to sleep. When I went back to school in the fall, I was elected
the first president of Teleport 2000, partially because I was the only student
in-the school with a freenet account, but mostly because my enthusiasm for this new,
exciting world was contagious.
Today, as the business world is becoming more aware of the advantages of
telecommunications, and the younger generation is becoming more aware of the
opportunities, it is successfully being integrated into all aspects of our society.
Companies are organizing Local Area Networks and tapping into information
resources through internal networking and file sharing, and children of all ages are
entertained by the GUI-based commercial systems and amazed by the worldwide
system of gopher and search services. As a result, a million more people join the 'net
every month, according to a 1994 article by Vic Sussman in U.S. News
& World Report.
They say that the worldwide community used to double its knowledge every century. Right
now, that rate has been reduced to seven years, and is constantly
decreasing. I've learned more since I started traveling the information highway than I
could have possibly imagined. Through File Transfer Protocol sites, I can
download anything from virus-detection utilities to song lyrics and guitar tabs. I
receive press releases, proclamations and international news from the White House
via a mailing list. I even e-mailed President Clinton recently and received a response
the next day. And it was just a few months ago that I hung up my
2400-baud modem for a replacement six times as fast.
The essence of this international system of systems was neatly summed up by David S.
Jackson and Suneel Ratan in a recent Time article: "The magic of the Net is
that it thrusts people together in a strange new world, one in which they get to rub
virtual shoulders with characters they might otherwise never meet."
To me, this electronic "Cyberspace" was like kindergarten all over again. It was not only
an introduction to a whole new world of exciting opportunities, but it
helped me take a step further into maturity. Communicating with others on this alternate
plane of reality was so different, yet so similar, to the world I had already
experienced. The Internet is a place where the only way you can view people is by how
they choose to display themselves. Because you can't see other users,
you can't make any prejudgments based upon race, sex, or physical handicap. As stated by
John R. Levine and Carol Baroudi in The Internet for Dummies,
'Who you are on the Internet depends solely on how you present yourself through your
keyboard."
The reason for this is simple. The people who created this form of communication weren't
interested in that. They didn't care about political or ethnic boundaries;
they only cared about the abstract. As a result, the parallel world they conceived
contained a true form of equality. "One computer is no better than any other, and
no person is better than any other," wrote Levine and Baroudi, and the only way this
right can be taken away from you is if you choose to remove it yourself. My
realization of this concept taught me a lot about the faults of the real world, and why
so many people feel the need to defect to Cyberspace so frequently.
I believe in the future - not the extreme 1984; 2001: A Space Odyssey future, but the
inevitable progression from today into tomorrow. The people of tomorrow
will not be puzzled by the word "Internet" or the mechanics behind networking - these
will be basic survival skills in society. The future will see an
electronically-linked global community, in which everyone is a citizen. The constant
thickening of the worldwide web of networks excites me, because it
proves that the world is not as big as one may think. You really can reach out to anyone
you want in a matter of milliseconds.
The other day, I was helping a ten-year-old girl find an e-mail "key-pal" from Australia.
I think I see a lot of me, the curious eighth-grader, in her. Perhaps I see a lot
of the future, too.
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