- Knowledge Navigator
The Knowledge Navigator is a concept described by former
Apple Computer CEO John Sculley in his1987 book, . It describes a device that can access a large networkeddatabase ofhypertext information, and usesoftware agent s to assist searching for information.Apple produced several concept videos showcasing the idea. All of them featured a tablet style computer with numerous advanced capabilities, including an excellent text-to-speech system with no hint of "computerese", a gesture based interface reminiscent of the
multitouch interface used on theiPhone and an equally powerful speech understanding system, allowing the user to converse with the system via an animated "butler" as thesoftware agent .In one vignette a university professor returns home and turns on his computer, in the form of a tablet the size of a large-format book. The agent is a bow-tie wearing butler who appears on the screen and informs him that he has several calls waiting. He ignores most of these, from his mother, and instead uses the system to compile data for a talk on
deforestation in theAmazon rainforest . While he is doing this, the computer informs him that a colleague is calling, and they then exchange data through their machines while holding a video based conversation.In another such video, a young student uses a smaller handheld version of the system to prompt him while he gives a class presentation on
volcano es, eventually sending a movie of an exploding volcano to the video "blackboard". In a final installment a user scans in a newspaper by placing it on the screen of the full-sized version, and then has it help him learn to read by listening to him read the scanned results, and prompting when he pauses.The videos were written and conceived by Hugh Dubberly and Doris Mitsch of
Apple Creative Services , and produced by The Kenwood Group in San Francisco. Director: Randy Field. Director of Photography: Bill Zarchy. As avision statement the films were groundbreaking, as powerful a vision of the future of computing as "". It may be useful to note that the video opened with the statement "In the year 2010." Most viewers missed this indication that the Knowledge Navigator was a visitor from the future and wanted the features now.The astute bow tie wearing
software agent in the video has been the center of quite a few heated discussions in the domain ofhuman-computer interaction . It was criticized as being an unrealistic portrayal of the capacities of any software agent in the foreseeable future, or even in a distant future. Someuser interface professionals likeBen Shneiderman of theUniversity of Maryland, College Park have also criticized its use of a human likeness for giving a misleading idea of the nature of any interaction with a computer, present or future.Compared to recent research in the field of
ubiquitous computing andaugmented reality interfaces many of the aspects of the Knowledge Navigator seem a bit quaint. For some however this video prototype was and/or still is a source of motivation for their work. They see it as a goal set in a future they might help create one day. To some extent the concept was also used to position theApple Newton handheld device. Newton was released before the technology was mature however, and proved to be a commercial failure. Eventually, the advent of theInternet and theWorld Wide Web and several devices marketed by Apple's competitors would indeed fulfill some of the visions of the Knowledge Navigator.See also
*
Artificial intelligence
*Clippy
*Dynabook
*Knowledge visualization
*Office of the future
*Starfire video prototype
*The Singularity [http://www.singinst.org/overview/whatisthesingularity]External links
* Two extracts (47 seconds each) of the "professor" video: http://www.billzarchy.com/clips/clips_apple_nav_navigator.htm
* The entire "professor" video (5 min 45 s): http://www.digibarn.com/collections/movies/knowledge-navigator.html
* "Future Shock", a similar video, also made by Apple (11 min 54 s): http://www.mprove.de/uni/asi/futureshock.html
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