Information Technologies and Social TransformationNational Academies Press, 1985. gada 1. febr. - 184 lappuses This collection of papers by scholars of technology and society, based on a National Academy of Engineering symposium, explores the process of mutual adjustment between information technologies and social institutions. The topics addressed include recent developments and likely futures in information technology, comparison of information technology to historical developments in other technologies, and the interaction of information technology with businesses, homes, property rights in information, and various hierarchies of social organization. |
No grāmatas satura
1.5. rezultāts no 25.
. lappuse
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
. lappuse
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
. lappuse
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
. lappuse
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
. lappuse
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
Saturs
Introduction Joseph v Charyk | |
The Evolution of Information Technologies John S Mayo 7 | |
Evolution or Revolution? Melvin Kranzberg 35 | |
Speculations on the Global Information Society 55 | |
Property Rights in Information Anne Wells Branscomb 81 | |
Information Technologies in the Home Walter S Baer 123 | |
Business | |
About the Authors | |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
action activities advances already American authors automation become better broadcast changes chip circuit Cleveland communications companies concern consumer continue cost Court created decisions distribution economic effective electronic Engineering environment example force function future GLOBAL growing HIERARCHY http://www.nap.edu/catalog/166.html PROPERTY RIGHTS human impact important improve increase individual industry Information Age information technologies innovation institutions integrated interactive interest issues knowledge Laboratories learning less limits living machines major manufacturing materials means million nature needs networks operate organization percent political possible potential Press processing production programs protection recent records reporters result Revolution RIGHTS IN INFORMATION robots Science serve social society sources standards technical telephone television things United University viewing York