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Posted on February 5 at 11:30 a.m.Suggest removal

(Responding to comment by vu2rgu on February 5, 2010 at 12:59 a.m.)
"... the US should move forward to revive lost languages by harnessing the power of the computing machine."

The problem is that our computing machinery is ephemeral, much less stable and enduring than the "wetware" in the brains of people. People live 60-100 years. The best storage media ever developed for computers were punched paper cards, paper tape or Mylar tape, but they are extremely low-density and a half century after their invention you'll only find them and the equipment to read them in computer museums. CD's and DVD's? No one knows, but it is thought the world's best brands might be good for 10 to 30 years under optimum storage conditions. Flash memory devices? Perhaps 5 to 7 years of data retention. Storage in "the cloud"? One slip by data center employees and terabytes of data can disappear from arrays of disk drives in seconds, and even then, the disk drives we now have are Made in China and carry warranties of only 1 to 5 years. The codes used to store data evolve, too, with ASCII being displaced by Unicode, although the casual observer wouldn't be able to tell one from the other at the binary level. Until long-life storage media are developed and methods for accessing such media are frozen so that information can be stored and retrieved for centuries, even millennia, we're better off using clay tablets, parchment scrolls and the wetware of human brains to keep languages alive.

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Posted on February 5 at 11:02 a.m.Suggest removal

Based on the poorly-written stuff I read on Wikipedia and dozens of forums that I visit on the Internet, I contend that English, too, is threatened, with the lack of proper formal training in today's schools and the encroachment of various pidgin dialects and text-messaging writing styles. Need further proof? Check out the so-called Urban Dictionary site on the Internet. I learned German as a child from my father in the 1950's. When I compare the reading materials I had in the 1960's with what we find on the Web today, German has become almost unrecognizable, as it is larded with English words and phrases and the grammar is even getting twisted. I also learned Latvian -- an ancient language whose roots have been traced back some 4,000 years -- from my mother at the same time, and am still fluent in it, but don't find the language useful in the modern environment, as it lacks the vocabulary I need to deal in my chosen profession, electronics engineering. You'd think that Gutenberg's invention of the printing press would have frozen languages, as it did German for centuries, but with international telephone, radio, television, pop music and Internet communications, the stability of all languages seems to have become unmoored.

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