A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, March 18, 2019
The web at 30
Our wait for a telephone was just a few years. At the time, in the early
90s, we knew of families who were on a waiting list for close upon a
decade. I was at school when Sri Lanka Telecom had installed the rotary
device. Like the first mobile phones from Motorola to hit Sri Lanka, the
unit weighed about the same as and was more akin to gym equipment than
anything remotely akin to what is today considered a phone. I was
enthralled, and dialled, for no reason than to just use the telephone, a
friend I had seen not more than an hour ago. He lived in Mount Lavinia.
We both had five-digit phone numbers. We were both excited to talk at
length about nothing of consequence before my father subtley reminded me
that the call was expensive. It was the first time I learnt of peak and
off-peak charges. It wasn’t yet possible to just dial an international
number. That required prior approval and an up-front payment, in
addition to hundreds of rupees a minute, depending on the country
dialled. There was no Internet. There was no web. Smartphones hadn’t
been invented. Social media hadn’t been invented. I didn’t own or even
have access to a computer. It was a purely analogue world, with the only
sign of digital made by Casio and strapped to my wrist. The few
conversations I had, at the time, were always prefaced by a few minutes
of sheer wonder that the call connected, followed by amazement we were
talking over a telephone.
The godayata magic moments continued after I was given my first PC, with
access to what at the time was a web just six years old. Before this,
and even around this time, there were several bulletin board systems
that Sri Lankans had set up which I had heard about, but never once
accessed. The entire processing power of that first computer is now
exceeded, many times over, by the phone in my pocket. Back then, the
promise of the web – to connect people, no matter where they were
geographically located – was fresh, wonderful and exciting especially
for someone who had never left the country or travelled much within. I
was drawn to the early Yahoo and Alta Vista. My father started what at
the time was a very expensive subscription to the British PC Magazine,
which every month, bundled a CD-ROM full of content ranging from videos
and photos to trial programmes (Shareware). This was also a time in my
life where I was an avid gamer, going for first-person shoot ‘em ups and
flight simulations (Quake, Duke Nukem 3D and Super Eurofighter 2000
were firm favourites) overrole-playing or strategy games.
I got into dissembling my computer and putting it back together again,
in the process learning about integrated circuits, motherboards,
electronics and how everything worked. If something worked perfectly, I
broke it, but only to figure out why things ran without a hitch. But it
was the web that I kept returning to the most. Having taught myself the
HTML – I set out to build my own websites and hosted the first on
Geocities. I cannot recall anything close to the toxicity now taken for
granted in any social media platform. I signed up with Hotmail, where I
was delighted to get all of 2Mb as storage. A few years later, just
before I left for University in the late 90s, I signed up with Yahoo,
which at the time offered twice as much storage. In Delhi, I used
ramshackle computers in cybercafes to access Yahoo – almost exclusively
to write to my parents. Occasionally, and as a treat to myself, I used
to go to the British Council in New Delhi and pay dearly, for half an
hour, to use a computer (Compaq’s, if I recall correctly) that looked
clean, smelt fresh and worked without frequent crashes. I still have
those emails, with those two accounts. But for Archchi and Seeya, I
still used to handwrite and post aerogrammes.
It was not until 2004, with the introduction of Gmail featuring at the
time a mind-boggling 1Gb of storage, that emails weren’t something one
sent and almost immediately deleted. I recall how at the time, the few
invitations one got to share with others to join Gmail became a high
valued currency of their own. In Australia and doing my Masters at the
time, I recall a friend who even inveigled a date based on the promise
of sharing an invite to Gmail if it went well. The web by the mid-2000s
was already very different from what it was in the 90s. Netscape and
Microsoft had had their browser wars. Chrome hadn’t yet been developed. I
preferred Netscape, but everything at the University was designed to
run only on Microsoft’s Internet Explorer. The iPhone was still many
years away, but I had a Nokia phone that could take photos and video –
the sort of pixelated junk that today would be considered art, if any of
it survived. I got into blogging around this time, joining a small
community on Kottu.org – a blog aggregator that is around even today.
By 2008, based on a hunch that mobile phones would in years to come
dominate access to web content, I created the country’s first Facebook
page for a media platform and also mobile-specific versions of the site.
A YouTube video of my old Nokia 3110c accessing a text-only version of a
website on its tiny, low-resolution colour screen never fails to bring a
smile to my face. We have come a very long way technically but
regressed in the tone, timbre and tenor of public communications,
conversations and content creation.
Though often asked, I don’t quite know what the next 30 years of the web
holds. If the past three decades have been anything to go by, it is an
entirely futile task to envision today what connectivity and digital
content will be like in 2049. If I’m around then, I will miss even more
the sound of modems connecting to the internet – a cacophony of
communications protocols agreeing to be nice to each other, rendered
loudly through both a tiny and tinny speaker that made it impossible to
connect on the sly, or quickly. I will still remember my parents asking
me to disconnect from the Internet so that they could make a call. I
will remember, but not miss the relatives who said they could never call
my parents, because the phone seemed to be always engaged. I will
sorely miss the indestructibility of old Nokia phones, which connected
me through what are now rudimentary but far more meaningful ways to
those I really wanted to be in touch with. I already miss – as I am sure
most connected to the web in the 90s also do – the spirit of a large,
essentially welcoming community, collegiality and an essential decency
on it. The web then was entirely peripheral to life, society and
politics, which is perhaps why it attracted only hobbyists, geeks, the
very young or a much older demographic.
The creator of the web, Sir Tim Berners-Lee, is rightfully concerned
that his creation has transmogrified in ways he never imagined or
intended. Last week, celebrating the first three decades of the web, he
issued a manifesto around how things must change. It is unclear if he
will succeed because what was at first technical, with high barriers to
access and mostly peripheral to socio-political life and civic identity,
is now central to it. The web Berners-Lee created really only exists as
a network protocol.His original creation is now indistinguishable from
what frames and fuels politics, elections, society, institutions,
identity, communications, relations and community. To be alive, for
billions, is to be connected.The next 30 years will see the effects of
all this, for better and worse.