"Anyone who has lost track of time when using a computer knows the propensity to dream, the urge to make dreams come true and the tendency to miss lunch"
About this Quote
Berners-Lee slips a quiet love letter to computing inside a joke about forgetting lunch. The line works because it refuses the standard “tech is efficient” myth and instead frames the computer as a dream machine: not just a tool that accelerates tasks, but an environment that warps time and expands desire. “Lost track of time” is the tell. He’s describing flow before the word became corporate wallpaper, the trance where curiosity overrides the body’s alarms. Lunch is the punchline, but it’s also the price.
The triad is carefully calibrated: propensity to dream, urge to make dreams come true, tendency to miss lunch. First comes imagination, then agency, then consequence. That middle clause is the real thesis: computers don’t merely simulate fantasies; they invite you to operationalize them. In Berners-Lee’s case, the context matters: he didn’t just use computers, he built the Web to turn abstract hopes (shared knowledge, frictionless collaboration) into infrastructure. The quote doubles as a portrait of the inventor’s mindset - a person who believes daydreams should be executable.
Subtextually, it’s also an early warning about the bargain we strike with screens. The same absorption that enables creation also enables neglect: of meals, of time, of the world outside the terminal. By keeping the tone light, Berners-Lee avoids moral panic while still admitting that computation is not neutral; it rearranges attention. The joke lands because anyone who’s ever opened a laptop “for five minutes” recognizes the seduction - and the small, human cost of being endlessly persuadable by possibility.
The triad is carefully calibrated: propensity to dream, urge to make dreams come true, tendency to miss lunch. First comes imagination, then agency, then consequence. That middle clause is the real thesis: computers don’t merely simulate fantasies; they invite you to operationalize them. In Berners-Lee’s case, the context matters: he didn’t just use computers, he built the Web to turn abstract hopes (shared knowledge, frictionless collaboration) into infrastructure. The quote doubles as a portrait of the inventor’s mindset - a person who believes daydreams should be executable.
Subtextually, it’s also an early warning about the bargain we strike with screens. The same absorption that enables creation also enables neglect: of meals, of time, of the world outside the terminal. By keeping the tone light, Berners-Lee avoids moral panic while still admitting that computation is not neutral; it rearranges attention. The joke lands because anyone who’s ever opened a laptop “for five minutes” recognizes the seduction - and the small, human cost of being endlessly persuadable by possibility.
Quote Details
| Topic | Technology |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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