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