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AI-Generated Overview About “memex”:


Books Results

Source: The Open Library

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1Glut

Mastering Information Through the Ages

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“Glut” Metadata:

  • Title: Glut
  • Author:
  • Language: English
  • Number of Pages: Median: 295
  • Publisher: ➤  Cornell University Press - Joseph Henry Press
  • Publish Date:
  • Publish Location: ➤  Washington, DC - Washington, D.C

“Glut” Subjects and Themes:

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Access and General Info:

  • First Year Published: 2007
  • Is Full Text Available: Yes
  • Is The Book Public: No
  • Access Status: Borrowable

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Memex

A memex (a portmanteau of "memory" and "index") is a hypothetical electromechanical device for interacting with microform documents and described in Vannevar

Vertical search

of the "Memex program", which aims at developing new search technologies overcoming some limitations of text-based search. DARPA wants the Memex technology

Vannevar Bush

particularly for his engineering work on analog computers, and for the memex. Starting in 1927, Bush constructed a differential analyzer, a mechanical

Search engine (computing)

essential feature of the memex. The process of tying two items together is the important thing. All of the documents used in the memex would be in the form

As We May Think

desire for a sort of collective memory machine with his concept of the memex that would make knowledge more accessible, believing that it would help

Office of the future

in The Atlantic Monthly magazine under the title "As We May Think." The Memex article in The Atlantic is most often cited because of its longer text which

Hypertext

We May Think", about a futuristic proto-hypertext device he called a Memex. A Memex would hypothetically store — and record — content on reels of microfilm

Deep web

.onion top-level domain. Internet portal Clearnet (networking) DARPA's Memex program Deep linking Deep Web Technologies Intellectual dark web Darknet

The Atlantic

on December 8, 2020. Retrieved January 29, 2018. Dalakov, Georgi. "The MEMEX of Vannevar Bush". The History of Computers. Archived from the original

Project Xanadu

and lack of investment. Charles S. Smith, the founder of a company called Memex (named after a hypertext system proposed by Vannevar Bush), hired many of