sigmaxipi comments on Open Thread, August 2010 - Less Wrong

4 Post author: NancyLebovitz 01 August 2010 01:27PM

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Comment author: [deleted] 02 August 2010 06:40:46AM 2 points [-]

A dead tree copy of Wikipedia. A history book about ancient handmade tools and techniques from prehistory to now. A bunch of K-12 school books about math and science. Also as many various undergraduate and postgraduate level textbooks as possible.

Comment author: JanetK 02 August 2010 11:30:32AM 4 points [-]

Wikipedia is a great answer because we know that most but no all the information is good. Some is nonsense. This will force the future generations to question and maybe develop their own 'science' rather than worship the great authority of 'the old and holy books'.

Comment author: JoshuaZ 02 August 2010 12:56:00PM 2 points [-]

The knowledge about science issues generally tracks our current understanding very well. And historical knowledge that is wrong will be extremely difficult for people to check post an apocalyptic event, and even then is largely correct. In fact, if Wikipedia's science content really were bad enough to matter it would be an awful thing to bring into this situation since having correct knowledge or not could alter whether or not humanity survives at all.

Comment author: Oscar_Cunningham 02 August 2010 11:43:05AM 3 points [-]

Wikipedia would also contain a lot of info about current people and places, which would no longer be remotely useful.

Comment author: NancyLebovitz 02 August 2010 03:21:13PM 1 point [-]

And a lot of popular culture which would no longer be available.

Comment author: sketerpot 02 August 2010 07:18:19AM 2 points [-]

A dead-tree copy of Wikipedia has been estimated at around 1,420 volumes. Here's an illustration, with a human for scale. It's big. You might as well go for broke and hole up in a library when the Big Catastrophe happens.

Comment author: mstevens 02 August 2010 11:03:25AM 2 points [-]

One of these http://thewikireader.com/ with rechargeable batteries and a solar charger could work.

Comment author: NihilCredo 02 August 2010 06:52:01PM 3 points [-]

Until some critical part oxidates or otherwise breaks. Which will likely be a long time before the new society is able to build a replacement.

Comment author: listic 04 August 2010 01:33:50PM 1 point [-]

But the WikiReader is probably a step in the right direction that is worth mentioning.

While most of the current technology depend on many other technology to be useful (cellular phones need cellular networks, most gadgets won't last a day on their internal batteries etc), the WikiReader is a welcome step in the direction less travelled. I only hope that we will have more of that.