|
B.O.O.K. (tm) A New Aid to Rapid Learning |
|
A new aid to rapid - almost magical - learning has made its appearance.
Indications are that if it catches on all the electronic gadgets will be so much
junk. The new device is known as Built-in Orderly Organised Knowledge. The
makers generally call it by its initials, BOOK(tm).
Many advantages are
claimed over the old-style learning and teaching aids on which most people are
brought up nowadays. It has no wires, no electronic circuit to break down. No
connection is needed to an electrical power point. It is made entirely without
mechanical parts to go wrong or need replacement. Anyone can use BOOK(tm), even
children, and it fits comfortably into the hands. It can be conveniently used
sitting in an armchair by the fire.
How does this revolutionary,
unbelievably easy invention work?
Basically BOOK(tm) consists only of a large
number of paper sheets. These may run to hundreds where BOOK(tm) covers a
lengthy program of information. Each sheet bears a number in sequence, so that
the sheets cannot be used in the wrong order. To make it even easier for the
user to keep the sheets in the proper order they are held firmly in place by a
special locking device called a "binding".
Each sheet of paper presents
the user with an information sequence in the form of symbols, which he absorbs
optically for automatic registration on the brain. When one sheet has been
assimilated a flick of the finger turns it over and further information is found
on the other side. By using both sides of each sheet in this way a great economy
is effected, thus reducing both the size and cost of BOOK(tm). No buttons need
to be pressed to move from one sheet to another, to open or close BOOK(tm), or
to start it working.
BOOK(tm) may be taken up at any time and used by
merely opening it. Instantly it is ready for use. Nothing has to be connected up
or switched on. The user may turn at will to any sheet, going backwards or
forwards as they so please. A sheet is provided near the beginning as a location
finder for any required information sequence.
A small accessory,
available at trifling extra cost, is the BOOK-MARK(tm) (- Modular Address
Retrieval Komponent). This enables the user to pick up his programme where he
left off on the previous learning session. BOOK-MARK(tm) mark is versatile and
may be used in any BOOK(tm).
The initial cost of BOOK(tm) varies with the
size and subject matter. Already a vast range of BOOK(tm)s is available,
covering every conceivable subject and adjusted to different levels of aptitude.
One BOOK(tm), small enough to be held in the hands, may contain an entire
learning schedule. Once purchased, BOOK(tm) requires no further upkeep cost; no
batteries or wires are needed, since the motive power, thanks to an ingenious
device patented by the makers, is supplied by the brain of the
user.
BOOK(tm)s may be stored on handy shelves and for ease of reference
the program schedule is normally indicated on the back of the binding.
Altogether the Built-in Orderly Organised Knowledge seems to have great
advantages with no drawbacks - we predict a big future for it.
An Anonymous Response
BOOK(tm) does not, in spite
of the claims, seem "to have great advantages with no drawbacks". Soon, it
probably won't even be legal.
Consider: "It can be conveniently used sitting
in an armchair by the fire" - Being paper, it might burn in the
fire.
Probably fire laws in most locations wouldn't allow its use there.
Worse, such a device, which encourages close proximity of the user to fire, will
be outlawed at the Health and Safety Executive's request.
"Each sheet
bears a number in sequence, so that the sheets cannot be used in the wrong
order" - How quaint; to think that the programmer (author) would be allowed to
turn over such an important task to the user! "cannot" is clearly misused; any
user could incorrectly turn to the wrong page. A proper user interface might
correct that, of course, such as requiring that each sheet be torn off to expose
the next. This is a clear conflict with - "The user may turn at will to any
sheet, going backwards or forwards as he pleases."
"BOOK(tm)s may be
stored on handy shelves and for ease of reference" - The user interface
obviously needs more work before such a system can be practical.
"the
motive power - is supplied by the brain of the user" - Clearly, the inventors
have not examined recent trends. No serious person would suggest even expecting
a "user" to have a brain present, much less to use it so
continuously.
I'd suggest the inventors return to their consoles and do a
thorough associative search of various data banks, like the rest of us, and
forget this nonsense.