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10 years of the Internet on the radio: Going Digital and Clicking My Fingers

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Bill Thompson Bill Thompson | 17:34 PM, Tuesday, 23 August 2011

Tim Berners-Lee interviewed by Bill Thompson

Tim Berners-Lee (right) being interviewed by Bill Thompson.

During June and July 2001 I helped some friends in the Ö÷²¥´óÐã's Radio Science Unit with , a new technology programme that had been commissioned by the World Service for their English language service, where it would sit with programmes on health and science as part of the broader non-news coverage on the English language service.

Working with , the presenter, we made some pilot programmes that were not intended to be broadcast, fine-tuning the balance of packages, presenter introductions and conversation with the 'studio expert' or 'presenter's friend' who was supposed to turn up each week and offer commentary, background information and - where necessary - a translation of any obscure technical terminology from the interviews and reports that made up the bulk of the show.

It was a role I described as 'well, Tracey', since after each interview or pre-recorded package she would turn to me and I'd go 'well, Tracey', and say something I hoped was helpful.

The show was first broadcast in August 2001 and I agreed to take part in the first four or five programmes, while things bedded in, but it was made clear that once Tracey had found her feet there would be a different guest each week to provide some variety and ensure that the commentary wasn't limited to one person's perspective.

Go Digital was well-received, and celebrates its tenth anniversary this week with a special live broadcast from the Radio Theatre in Broadcasting House. Gareth Mitchell took over as presenter in 2004, it was renamed 'Digital Planet' in 2005 and became Click (the radio version of the TV programme) earlier this year.

It has changed time slot, changed duration, had many wonderful producers (including some who may not have understood anything about computing or technology but tried very hard), moved from its original home in S7 in the basement of Bush House to the glory that is C21, and travelled the world, most notably .

Although much has changed it is still recognisably the same programme. I can say that with some confidence because I'm still there, presumably because it would be more trouble to find someone else, and so nobody has yet bothered. I don't go 'um', sound generally coherent and turn up each week.

Much has changed since 2001.

didn't launch until 2003, and has had time to grow and decline while we've been on air. When we launched there was no , no and no , while was only three years old. The Code Red worm was attacking computers running Microsoft's IIS Web Server, and I was using a Sony Vaio laptop with 128 megabytes of memory and a massive 20 gigabyte hard drive. My mobile phone was a phone, although it did send and receive text messages.

Over the years we have covered the technology landscape, from AI to Zero-day vulnerabilities, with a lot of attention paid to developments outside the developed economies, and a constant focus on people rather than the computers, phones or networks. The pace of change means that we are never short of topics with which to engage, whether it's the use of social media to provoke political change, the challenged to our ideas of privacy, our ability to keep up with and double the capabilities of our computers every 18 months or so, or the importance of digitally transmitted information services in transforming the lives of the world's poor and deprived.

It's a testament to the World Service that the programme has remained a key part of the science offering, and that talking about digital technology is still seen as worth doing, but that may be because we're not really a technology programme at all. Tracey, Gareth and I have always been more interested in the people than the technology, and we try hard to avoid simply holding up shiny toys and going 'ooh' and 'aah', even though I'm an avowed technophile.

And now we're in the midst of a revolution in human capabilities caused by the emergence a new class of intelligence-amplifying tools that will be as profound in their impact as the invention of stone tools, fire or print proved to be. A smartphone and Google-equipped teenager today, able to tap into much of the world's knowledge and their entire social network without a thought, is a very different person to me at 18, and they are going to build a different world to live in.

I hope that we get to report on it, for a least a little while longer.

Bill Thompson is Head of Partnership Development Ö÷²¥´óÐã Archive

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Also worth mentioning in terms of coverage of the internet before 2001 are The Network, broadcast around 1994 on Radio 4. And The Net, around the same time on Ö÷²¥´óÐã2.

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