Computer Media and Communication: A Reader is a collection of key texts selected for their significance to thought about computers as media. The chapters in the first part offer a chronological overview of how thinking about computers as a means of communication developed. The second part offers prophetic analyses of the implications of computer media for culture and society, while exemplifying significant directions of current research.
Computer Media and Communication: A Reader is a collection of key texts selected for their significance to thought about computers as media. The chapters in the first part offer a chronological overview of how thinking about computers as a means of communication developed. The second part offers prophetic analyses of the implications of computer media for culture and society, while exemplifying significant directions of current research.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Paul A. Mayer has taught at the Department of Communication at Seton Hall University in the areas of television production, digital technologies, and multimedia design and production
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction * PART ONE: HISTORY * Introduction: From Logic Machines to the Dynabook: An Overview of the Conceptual Development of Computer Media * 1: Vannevar Bush: As We May Think * 2: Alan M. Turing: Computing Machinery * 3: John C. R. Licklider: Man-Computer Symbiosis * 4: Douglas C. Engelbart: A Conceptual Framework for the Augmentation of Man's Intellect * 5: John C. R. Licklider and Robert R. Taylor: The Computer as a Communication Device * 6: Alan Kay and Adele Goldberg: Personal Dynamic Media * 7: Ted Nelson: A New Home for the Mind * 8: Alan Kay: Computer Software PART TWO: SYSTEMATIC STUDIES * 9: Niels Ole Finnemann: Modernity Modernized: The Cultural Impact of Computerization * 10: Jens F. Jensen: `Interactivity': Tracking a New Concept in Media and Communication Studies * 11: Klaus Bruhn Jensen: One Person, One Computer: The Social Construction of the Personal Computer * 12: Langdon Winner: Who Will We Be in Cyberspace? * 13: Steven G. Jones: Understanding Community in the Information Age * 14: Susan C. Herring: Posting in a Different Voice: Gender and Ethics in Computer-Mediated Communication * 15: Allucquere Rosanne Stone: Will the Real Body Please Stand Up?: Boundary Stories About Virtual Cultures * 16: Jay David Bolter: Topographic Writing: Hypertext and the Electronic Writing Space * 17: David Miles: The CD-ROM Novel Myst and McLuhan's Fourth law of Media: Myst and It's `Retrievals' * 18: Paul A. Mayer: Computer Mediated Studies: An Emerging Field * Index
* Introduction * PART ONE: HISTORY * Introduction: From Logic Machines to the Dynabook: An Overview of the Conceptual Development of Computer Media * 1: Vannevar Bush: As We May Think * 2: Alan M. Turing: Computing Machinery * 3: John C. R. Licklider: Man-Computer Symbiosis * 4: Douglas C. Engelbart: A Conceptual Framework for the Augmentation of Man's Intellect * 5: John C. R. Licklider and Robert R. Taylor: The Computer as a Communication Device * 6: Alan Kay and Adele Goldberg: Personal Dynamic Media * 7: Ted Nelson: A New Home for the Mind * 8: Alan Kay: Computer Software PART TWO: SYSTEMATIC STUDIES * 9: Niels Ole Finnemann: Modernity Modernized: The Cultural Impact of Computerization * 10: Jens F. Jensen: `Interactivity': Tracking a New Concept in Media and Communication Studies * 11: Klaus Bruhn Jensen: One Person, One Computer: The Social Construction of the Personal Computer * 12: Langdon Winner: Who Will We Be in Cyberspace? * 13: Steven G. Jones: Understanding Community in the Information Age * 14: Susan C. Herring: Posting in a Different Voice: Gender and Ethics in Computer-Mediated Communication * 15: Allucquere Rosanne Stone: Will the Real Body Please Stand Up?: Boundary Stories About Virtual Cultures * 16: Jay David Bolter: Topographic Writing: Hypertext and the Electronic Writing Space * 17: David Miles: The CD-ROM Novel Myst and McLuhan's Fourth law of Media: Myst and It's `Retrievals' * 18: Paul A. Mayer: Computer Mediated Studies: An Emerging Field * Index
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