Being Digital

$15.00 CAD

pp. 243, “In an upbeat primer on the information revolution, Negroponte, director of the MIT Media Lab and a columnist for Wired, says we are making a transition to a “post-information age” where digitized transmissions will become extremely personalized. He predicts that interactive multimedia will become more booklike, for example, a TV or video program with which you can curl up and either have a conversation or be told a story. In his scenario, the personal computer-gateway to a multitude of information and entertainment services-will replace the TV set, and by 2005 Americans will spend more hours on the Internet than watching network TV. Negroponte also describes the Media Lab’s teaching of learning-disabled children, critiques U.S. TV manufacturers’ approach to high-definition television, touts the advantages of E-mail over the uneconomical fax machine (“a step backward”) and ruminates on the emerging global digitized workplace.” previous owners inscription on verso of front cover

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Book Information

ISBN 0679439196
ISBN13 9780679439196
Number of pages 243
Original Title Being Digital
Published Date 1995
Book Condition Very Good
Jacket Condition Very Good
Binding Hardcover
Size 8vo
Place of Publication New york
Edition Third
Category:
Author:
Publisher:

Description

pp. 243, “In an upbeat primer on the information revolution, Negroponte, director of the MIT Media Lab and a columnist for Wired, says we are making a transition to a “post-information age” where digitized transmissions will become extremely personalized. He predicts that interactive multimedia will become more booklike, for example, a TV or video program with which you can curl up and either have a conversation or be told a story. In his scenario, the personal computer-gateway to a multitude of information and entertainment services-will replace the TV set, and by 2005 Americans will spend more hours on the Internet than watching network TV. Negroponte also describes the Media Lab’s teaching of learning-disabled children, critiques U.S. TV manufacturers’ approach to high-definition television, touts the advantages of E-mail over the uneconomical fax machine (“a step backward”) and ruminates on the emerging global digitized workplace.” previous owners inscription on verso of front cover

Additional information

Weight 1 kg