NOMADS OF TOMORROW
Earlier this year I spent time with the Blue Tuaregs, the last of the
nomads, who for millennia criss-crossed the desert sands of the
Western Sahara. Trekking through what is now Morocco, Algeria and
Mauretania to what was once the cross camel trails of the world, the
market at Timbuktu, Mali. Today these nomads are an endangered
species. The profit and glamor of hauling salt by camel for such a
52-day trip in an age of modern technology and rapidly changing lifestyles is vanishing rapidly. But as one species fades into history,
another appears: the new nomad.
Over the past seven years Steven K. Roberts, of Nomadic Research Labs
of California, has logged 16,000 miles testing out his computerized
recumbent bicycle while traversing America. How did it all start?
One day, like many city-dwellers, he probably asked himself "Why am I
here?" He had grown bored with his lifestyle, house, paperwork and
mid-western city. Where had all the playtime gone? Solution? Throw
out rational thought.
Six months later, sans three-bedroom bungelow in suburbia, and to the
dismay of friends and family he found himself aboard his "Winnebiko"
with a Radio Shack laptop, a communications link to CompuServe and a
five-watt solar panel. Almost immediately he discovered something
relevant. He could not only live this way, he could even make a
living! At the time the kindest comment received would be "It's
different".
Hooking up his computer to pay phones, along this new trail, via an
acoustic coupler, he soon found magazine assignments flowing in,
followed by a commission to create a book "Computing Across America".
The image served as a magnet for TV cameras and his rapidly wellknown communications link attracted sympathetic computer
communicators across the continent. The vision was the new cowboy,
"free (to roam), follow their dreams, and break the chains (that
bound) ..."
Roberts discovered another problem that has happened to all of us but
never seemed that much of a bother. He couldn't write while riding.
Surely technology can offer more than this?
Soon he was riding his new version for his life on the open road:
Winnebiko II. This space-age "camel" could carry the new nomad while
alongside rode travelling companion and photographer Maggie Victor.
And now he could type. One thousand hours of pedaling time is half a
full-time business year. That can cover a lot of typing. He wrote
and transmitted his work via electronic mail sent via packet radio.
A new lifestyle had evolved. Where the body and mind were became
immaterial as long as he could "maintain a presence in the networks."
Another 6,000 miles later after covering both east and west U.S.
coastlines he discovered that technology too was travelling fast. It
was time to incorporate "warp drive".
Today while gathering toys more in keeping with the age of ISDN and
artificial or virtual reality, his latest technological camel,
BEHEMOTH, is evolving even as you read this column. BEHEMOTH is "an
autonomous mobile information and communication platform, powered by
the sun, propelled by human muscle, linked via satellite with global
information networks." Corporate America saw the vision. Companies
ranging from Apple Computer to ZZip Designs contributed money,
products and expensive engineering advice for the project.
The result was a $178-an-ounce bike, almost $1 million in time,
equipment and energy provided by 150 sponsors. For what purpose? To
show the meaning of information. Roberts will be appearing regularly
at schools to plant the seeds of the new age: that the obvious track
in life is not the only route.
Roberts says it well: "Industry is requiring increasing specialization of its workers, due to the overwhelming amount of expert
knowledge associated with every technology. This yields positive
results but at a severe cost -- specialists inevitable lose sight
of the big picture. There is thus a growing market for people who
travel continuously among specialists, cross-fertilizing at every
stop. No trade journal or annual conference can accomplish as much
as a renegade cadre of curious technoid generalists, on the loose in
industry."
Think not what this machine can do, imagine what it can't.
Robarts has created his moving and profitable virtual reality. Can
you? He is in touch with us. Any ideas or suggestions will be
forwarded, or contact directly.
More information:
Barbara Chan,
Nomadic Research Labs,
P.O. Box 2185,
El Segundo, CA 90245-2185.
Other communications contact routes:
BIKELAB: 415/336-5037.
E-MAIL: GEnie, MCI, AOL, and Portal: wordy
internet: wordy@bikelab.Sun.com.
Book "Computing Across America"
US$11.95 including shipping.
Quarterly journal "Nomadness" US$21 via first-class mail.
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