Selected Product: | Multimedia: From Wagner to Virtual Reality, Expanded Edition Paperback Edition: Expanded Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company Release Date: 2002-12-16 ISBN-10: 0393323757 ISBN-13: 9780393323757 List Price: $19.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The Medium is the Massage ISBN-10: 1584230703 ISBN-13: 9781584230700 List Price:$13.95 Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets) ISBN-10: 0262693267 ISBN-13: 9780262693264 List Price:$18.95 The Cybercultures Reader ISBN-10: 0415183790 ISBN-13: 9780415183796 List Price:$43.95 New Media Handbook (Media Practice) ISBN-10: 0415307120 ISBN-13: 9780415307123 List Price:$37.95 Utopian Entrepreneur (Mediaworks Pamphlets) ISBN-10: 0262122448 ISBN-13: 9780262122443 List Price:$40.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Multimedia: From Wagner to Virtual Reality, Expanded Edition by 0 (ISBN-10: 0393323757, ISBN-13: 9780393323757). At this time we have not yet written a review for Multimedia: From Wagner to Virtual Reality, Expanded Edition by 0 (ISBN-10: 0393323757, ISBN-13: 9780393323757). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Tracing the fertile and fascinating series of collaborations between arts and sciences throughout the 20th century, Randall Packer and Ken Jordan present the often overlooked history behind multimedia - the interfaces, links and interactivity we all take for granted today. They bring together a collection of the groundbreaking visions of scientists like Vanneva Bush, Douglas Englebart and Norbert Wiener, and artists like John Cage, Nam June Paik and William Gibson. Their explanations of the core concepts behind multimedia provide historical context for modern technology. It is a digital world we live in... | Customer Rating: | | With the progression of human culture in the digital age developing as it is, it's intriguing to look back at even the recent past and see where we've been and where we were thought to be going. The collection of writings in this volume are invaluable and often shockingly ahead of their time. Anyone who expects to be successful in the future - in this ever-evolving digital world - would benefit by reading this book, and sooner rather than later. | Great Intro to this Topic | Customer Rating: | | I had to get this book for a class, but am very happy I was introduced to these theories. I'd recommend it for anyone interested in the topic of where online media is going. | An Excellent Resource for Digital Media Enthusiasts | Customer Rating: | | From Futurist Cinema, to artificial intelligence, to cyberspace, this collection highlights the origins of multimedia, its influences, its directions, and its future possibilities. It includes an insightful and comprehensive introduction by Packer and Jordan themselves, and the authors they have chosen to include in this work reflect the vast landscape of multimedia in its many iterations: Vannevar Bush, William Gibson, Norbert Wiener, John Cage, and Janet Murray, just to mention a few. This book is a must-have for anyone interested in peeking below the surface of multimedia evolution. | An Excellent Collection of Fascinating Contributors | Customer Rating: | | Reading this collection of articles gave me a better understanding of the people and ideas that helped shape computer-based communication. The contributors are for the most part well chosen; a few that I might well have done without, I must admit -- but far more excellent choices than "questionable" ones. The organization of the book is interesting as well. I was reminded of the magazine "Mondo 2000" that I subscribed to in the early '90's (multimedia/geek chic). | The book is a must read; the web site is a must see! | Customer Rating: | | This book is a must read for anyone interested in modern art and culture, and where its going. The companion web site on www.artmuseum.net is a brilliant compliment to the book, with 50 video clips, rare photos and other treats. Finally, a publishing project that "gets it" how to use the web + printed book in a way where the sum is greater than the parts. Its amazing to see how long artists and scientists have been working (alone, and in some cases together) towards this goal. Prehaps the following decade will witness a true "waking up" by the mass culture to this new syntax, new reading-practice, of multi-media hyper-texted information. This book may mark a point in time where we started acknowledging the depth and extent of our post-Guttenburg world. Bravo to Randall Packer and Ken Jordon for pulling this project off. |
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