Bruce Sterling's Final Prediction
In Bruce Sterling's final column for Wired, he summarizes the output of a survey of Net prognosticators conducted by the Pew Internet & American Life Project. The piece is peppered with Sterling's trademarked stop-you-in-your-tracks imagery. An example: "The bubble-era vision of a Utopian Internet is dented and dirty... The Lexus has collided with the olive tree, and its crumpled hulk spins in a ditch as the orchard smolders."
"The bubble-era vision of a Utopian Internet is dented and dirty... The Lexus has collided with the olive tree, and its crumpled hulk spins in a ditch as the orchard smolders."
This metaphor is a can of Pringles, and its vigor is enhanced by venomous ducks that flip it daily with a caterpillar that just won't shut up.
Seriously... what?
<xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
Who is your meth dealer, and does he make house calls?
The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits.
The bubble-era vision of a Utopian Internet is dented and dirty... The Lexus has collided with the olive tree, and its crumpled hulk spins in a ditch as the orchard smolders.
I think he's using that new-fangled English 2.0 thingy.
"The bubble-era vision of a Utopian Internet is dented and dirty... The Lexus has collided with the olive tree, and its crumpled hulk spins in a ditch as the orchard smolders..."
William Gibson and Chuck Palahniuk are saying to themselves: "Oh god, *I* don't sound like that, do I?"
A bad metaphor is like a leaky screwdriver.
/. sig)
(shamelessly stolen from someone's