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Douglas Adams was very proud of being born in 1952 at Cambridge and having the initials of DNA. Is it really a surprise that the author, born the same year and place that the DNA helix was discovered, would turn out to be so passionate about science and new technologies? |
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Douglas Adams believed in the positive offerings of scientific and technological progress. With a certain irony, he said that we were often scared by anything new because we always took what we knew from our youth as a standard of judgment. | ![]() |
DNA was always much appreciated in scientific and computer communities, probably because they were well placed to admire the complex universe and twisted imaginary of his writings (from the improbability drive to the concept of Earth being a gigantic computer to solve the question to the ultimate answer). |
Indeed, it was his passion for science and his obsession to understand everything that got him interested in new technologies, although he steered clear of primary fetishism: he made great fun of the generation who fantasized over liquid crystal display watches! Nevertheless, he liked being at the forefront of computer technology. He adopted the Internet since the very beginning (in 1983 he used an american based service called the Source), and was then a great user of newsgroups. Of course, he bought personal computers from the first generations, as soon as 1982 : "It was a stand alone word processor called a Nexus which was horrendously expensive by today's standards and probably less powerful than the free calculator you'd get in a Chistmas cracker". Years later, he fell upon the Apple machines, which he would stay fervently faithful to until his death. The Californian company would even give him the honorific title of Apple Master. Only a few months before his death, he had on his desk two PowerMac G4 computers with Apple Cinema Displays, a PowerBook, three iMacs and even an old G3! And many High tech giants were fans. Sir Clive Sinclair, creator of the famous computers in the eighties, bought an advance copy of "So Long..." from Douglas for one thousand pounds (given to Greenpeace) ! |
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| MORE READING |
| "Is There An Artificial God?" the speech made by Douglas Adams during the Digital Biota 2, September 1998 |
| Homage by Richard Dawkins |
| LINKS |
| The Guide to the Future. |
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