I personally wouldn't characterize Asimov's writing as anything near awful. It's simple, yes-- but only enough to bring a layman sensibility to the most esoteric and abstract of concepts.
It depends on what you're looking for. His settings are mind-blowing (the more so when they were new and you didn't have Singulatarians running around blowing your mind twice as hard) and his stories dramatically sound, but his characters tend towards simplistic and dialog is pretty rough, even by contemporary standards.
This isn't a criticism he'd be surprised by. He said so himself, several times, in some of the books I have. Romance in particular was a weak point of the entire genre during his era, and he admits it's because they were all pretty stereotypical nerds.
Fortunately, that's not why we were reading his books.
Really love the short story where he takes you through the first ever trillionth frame per second imaging of an atomic explosion!
The one where the historian builds a "past window" device and releases the specification on the internet really makes me think, too....
I have not read this before. But I heard this story told by a college professor Michio Kaku when I was in his astronomy 101 class. Yes, he is the author of the book, Hypersapce.(http://www.amazon.com/Hyperspace-Scientific-Odyssey-Parallel...) It's a good book to read if you're interested in those things.
I concur with all of your particulars (everyone has read this, fun two minute read, occasionally brilliant ideas, generally awful writing, sadly missed) and was completely in agreement up until your very last word.
If Isaac Asimov's a genius, what was Isaac Newton?
"...all little sisters like to try on big sister's clothes..."
> If Isaac Asimov's a genius, what was Isaac Newton?
A genius of a different type. Can you compare Nelson Mandela with Leonhard Euler? Can you compare Benjamin Franklin with William Shakespeare? Genius, like intelligence, comes in different flavors.
In short, it's silly and ultimately pointless trying to quantify terms such as "genius". One person's "genius" is abother person's "skilled". Let's agree that it's not worth worrying about.
Sorry, but I think there's orders of magnitude of difference involved here. Sure, you can compare Nelson Mandela, Leonhard Euler, Benjamin Franklin and William Shakespeare-- all were (are) truly exceptional men of the first order.
Asimov was a somewhat talented and extremely prolific science fiction writer. He wrote a few great short stories, a few great novels, and a lot of standard (and sub-standard) fare. To call him a "genius" devalues the term beyond recognition.
Then we'll agree to differ. I think simple, direct and engaging writing is difficult, and coming up with such a range of ideas to exploit is equally difficult. I think in this field Asimov has very, very few peers. I'm not upset that you don't think he was a genius.
What I find fascinating in this short story is the concept of THE computer. That was the vision of the computer back only two or three decades ago (and I'm old enough to remember). Everyone has a terminal into the main computer, instead of the myriad of personal computers (handhelds, laptops, etc) that we actually have.
The concept of a major computer site taking up a huge amount of space might be superficially coming true with all the data centers we're building, and terminals are superficially like accessing the cloud instead of doing the computation locally, the concept of a single, massive entity is not really being pursued. We understand the limitations. We don't have the technology or even a theory behind how we would program one massive program, utilizing the zillions of little processors, as a single entity. We can't get multi-threading right even for comparatively trivial programs (compared to a Multivac, I mean) that do no AI.
I find it surprising that no OS yet comes with a distributed processing framework (i.e. a pluggable system to support things like Folding@Home) installed and running by default. I predict that it might be the norm in ten years or so; then we'll actually get the effect you mention, where anyone can rent processor time on "the InterVAC" (or at least "the MicrosoftVAC" and "the GNUVAC", if it doesn't get standardized.)
Mind you, it's a fun two minute read to remind me of Asimov. Occasionally brilliant ideas, generally awful writing.
Sadly missed genius.