Mensa Symposium Predicts Future

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East Anglian Film Archive at the University of East Anglia
The East Anglian Film Archive, the UK's first regional film archive, offers a unique record of the East of England's social and cultural history. As part of the University of East Anglia, we continue to lead moving image heritage research and inspire audience participation through community projects and events. Our collections represent a broad range of amateur and professional creativity, from 1896 to the present day.

Mensa Symposium Predicts Future (About Anglia)

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Sir Clive Sinclair outlines his vision for our computer future.

The 1984 Mensa Symposium opened with chairman Sir Clive Sinclair's vision of the 21st century. Highly intelligent robots will become our doctors, teachers and even our companions, he predicts. By 2020 mental toil will be the task of a computer. Sinclair insists that he is not trying to replicate the human brain through the computers, but rather to create 'thinking machines', sharing a large pool of data ensuring consistent, unbiased information. The metacomputer will become a friend and servant to the family, never forgetting a birthday, and will even have its own unique personality.

Sinclair does not believe people should be intimidated by the fast-developing technology. One day computers will provide wisdom and a place to turn to when having a problem - a wonderful stress reliever. Miranda Hambro, the youngest Mensa member at the symposium is more cautious about the role of computers in the future, saying she would not want a computer to take over the world.

The reporter was Owen Spencer-Thomas for this video, made to be shown in a news story on Anglia Television's early evening news / magazine programme About Anglia.

Founded in 1946, Mensa is an organisation limiting its membership to people of high intelligence, generally reflecting those scoring in the top two percent of the population in a standardised IQ test. Sir Clive Sinclair was a pioneer in the 1970s and 1980s computing industry, developing consumer electronics, including the Sinclair Executive, the world's first slimline electronic pocket calculator in 1972. His continuing work was a key part of the cluster of high-tech businesses in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire.


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Silicon Fen

Computers and digital innovation in Cambridgeshire 1982-1988.
In the 1980s, Cambridgeshire had a concentration of individuals and businesses working on computer technology, often connected with the University of Cambridge. This earned it the nickname Silicon Fen, linking the East England fenland to California's high-tech Silicon Valley. Clive Sinclair, Acorn's BBC Micro and Alan Sugar of Amstrad became household names, but many smaller companies contributed to the regional success story. Silicon Fen was and still is at the cutting edge of UK information technology, credited with innovations in integrated circuits, computer hardware and software, graphics, games and information resources, not to mention launching Britain's first affordable home computers. This selection of news items from Anglia Television's About Anglia highlights some key developments and examples of early adoption of computers for work and home.

11 videos in this collection

1

Online Shopping is on its Way

2

Cambridge Computer-Based Technology

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Mensa Symposium Predicts Future

4

Olympia's Personal Computer World Show 1985

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Sinclair C5 Cycle / Car Launched

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East of England Show Pictorial Archive

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Appeal For Computer Game Programmers

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Computer Lifeline for the Elderly

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Computer Shows Off Make Up Effects

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Computerised flood warning system

11

Computer Predicts Horse Racing Results

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