LIFE IN THE 60S OFFICE A few more tinkerings to GophHub yesterday which I couldn't resist. It probably does everything I need at this point, and works well as a search option in Dillo for quick pasting of GitHub URLs. Whether anyone else is interested remains to be determined, so I'll try to resist working too much on things for other people like me who might, once again, turn out to be entirely imaginary. On the other hand I've been looking back once again to simpler times, when the internet didn't even exist to have services taken away from its Javascript-less users. My latest documentary discovery is the 1960s british series "Look at Life", which replaced the newsreel footage shown before films in the cinema because by then television had taken over as the eyes of the newsman. Documentary crews travelled around for years shooting hundreds of ten-minute pieces (unfortunately not nearly so many seem to have made it to the internet) looking simply at life in the UK and abroad. Covering general topics like travel destinations to more specific things like touring factories and, in this case, what goes on in the new high-rise offices of Shell in London. Of course if anyone's going to have money to splash on all the latest tech, it would be an oil company, and Shell had been busy turning their liquid gold into all the latest of 1960s technology. A portion of the "Look at Life" film "Rising to high office"*, from 1963, shows a selection of these modern mechanical office marvels, and they're indeed all very 1960s-snazzy. But besides the big spinning tape drives attended to by a team of the workers in the computer room, most of this technology is actually incredibly backward-looking to todays eyes. It is full of elegant solutions to the specific jobs at hand, but in most cases those jobs have been partly or entirely replaced by the modern version of that big computer. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8zUQD1p9bXY We see a system for typists to receive recordings of dictations for them to enter on typewriters, clearly for a result that would now be expected of the man dicating and the word procesor on his PC. We see a mail sorting room using human sorters, but a pneumatic mail transport systems to deliver letters all over the building, then a conveyor system to squirt new ones back out. Stamps from all over the world are collected to be raffled off as collectables for the the more nerdy of the Shell workforce. Now of course most of these letters would be Emails instead, and surely mail processing needs to be much less industrial even now that machines can take over the sorting task too. Then we have the girls at their fully-electronic phone switchboards, enjoying the lack of patch leads, but perhaps unaware that future 'switchboards' will effectively come with the girls built-in as well. Even the modern air conditioning system is overseen by a team of dedicated warmth wranglers in their own control room, which would now exist only in the configuration menus of an automated computerised climate control system. This might all be as expected. Anyone would expect computers to have caused such a reinvention of office work since the early 1960s when they were just beginning to find their place. But the documentary is primarily about the building. A high-rise building, designed to pack thousands of people into the best location of the country for business to take place. This is a type of building that, albeit so new to England then that even the narration borders on acknowledging it as an eyesore, has since become a staple of every major city in the world. Yet many of those people were then in the rooms of typists, of switchboard operators, of mail sorters, and much more. So many jobs that no longer exist, and yet the building style designed to accomodate them has thrived. I frankly don't understand it. Of course with the advent of working from home by computer, it has been suggested that the age of such buildings is passing. This is really an acknowledgement that none of those physical services that such buildings were designed for are needed anymore, least of all in the centre of a major city. The computer has replaced the office skyscraper entirely, and people are only now starting to realise it. But today, with actors striking over fears they'll be replaced by AI, and the news filled with warnings that computers are on the brink of replacing a new round of human occupations, one wonders what did happen to all the people who used to do the office jobs already taken over decades ago by computers? Even in the entertainment industry this is hardly new - Disney used to employ huge numbers of artists, not just for composing the animations of their famous films, but filling extra frames of movement between those 'key frames', a job which was once truely industrial in its scale, now replaced by computers. The news stories claim this is new, but actually it's a repeat of what was heard in the 1970s from documentaries like the BBC's 1978 Horizon episode "Now The Chips are Down", which I talked about in 2022-12-10Doco_Discoveries.txt. That film prophesied that the replacement of all these occupations by computers would be an economic disaster causing mass unemployment. Seemingly it was wrong, but I'm not entirely sure why. Whatever industries have been absorbing this ever increasing surplus workforce, they presumably do have a limit at some point. Maybe AI will indeed push beyond that limit and we'll all be ruined? Or ideally I'd hope that something like a universal basic income could be realised to share the reality that, thanks to technology, our society as a whole no longer needs to work as hard as it used to early last century. But I'm not very optimistic about that. - The Free Thinker * More Look at Life episodes are listed here, although I'm yet to find a central place to download many of them from (it seems that most online were those which were released on DVD in the UK a decade ago): https://www.themoviedb.org/tv/135875-look-at-life/seasons