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Project Xanadu - Wikipedia
Project Xanadu was the first hypertext project, founded in 1960 by Ted Nelson. Administrators of Project Xanadu have declared it superior to the World Wide Web, with the mission statement: "Today's popular software simulates paper. The World Wide Web (another imitation of paper) trivialises our original … See more
Nelson's vision was for a "digital repository scheme for world-wide electronic publishing". Nelson states that the idea began in 1960, when he was a student at Harvard University. … See more
• Official website
• Xanadu Australia – an active site
• "Xanadu Products Due Next Year," by Jeff Merron. BIX online news report from the West Coast Computer Faire, 1988 See more1. Every Xanadu server is uniquely and securely identified.
2. Every Xanadu server can be operated independently or in a network.
3. Every user is uniquely and securely identified. See moreWikipedia text under CC-BY-SA license Memex - Wikipedia
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Ted Nelson and Xanadu - World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
History of hypertext - Wikipedia
History of Hypertext: Article by Jakob Nielsen
Feb 1, 1995 · Chapter 3 from Jakob Nielsen's book, Multimedia and Hypertext, describes the major milestones for hypertext, the internet, and the world wide web, including Vannevar Bush's Memex and Doug Engelbart's landmark …
Hypertext in Historical Context: Vannevar Bush and Ted Nelson …
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Ted Nelson, Hypertext, and Hippie Modernism
May 28, 2023 · Acknowledging his debt to WWII-era tech visionary Vannevar Bush, who conceived of a mechanical version of hypertext called a memex, Nelson’s Literary Machines reproduces the entire text of Bush’s 1945 seminal …
Influential Concepts: How Vannevar Bush's Memex …
Nov 6, 2023 · The memex, first proposed by Vannevar Bush in his 1945 essay "As We May Think," is a theoretical device that aimed to enhance human memory and knowledge by allowing people to...
A Brief History of Hypertext - The History of the Web
Bush published an article in the Atlantic in 1945 titled “As We May Think.” In it, Bush posits the creation of a system called Memex, which would use the technology of microfilm to store a cohesive record of the entirety of human …
Memex - University of Virginia
Ted Nelson Coins the Terms Hypertext, Hypermedia, …
In the essay, Bush described a microfilm-based machine (the Memex) in which one could link any two pages of information into a "trail" of related information, and then scroll back and forth among pages in a trail as if they were on a …
Foreseeing the Future: The legacy of Vannevar Bush
Vannevar Bush and the Memex - cyberartsweb.org
Memex Explained: Everything You Need to Know - History …
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