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  • ...plugged in, and the controls are outside your body, being part of whatever technology is interfaced to the body itself. As part of such a man-machine interface ...yperCard, journalists referred to the application as 'database software' ("TECHNOLOGY"). But the creator of HyperCard and Apple Computers insisted that HyperCard
    30 KB (4,669 words) - 10:26, 24 November 2010
  • ...sponsibility of which therefore had to be shared by the areas of medicine, technology, education, and politics” (8).
    33 KB (5,265 words) - 10:55, 24 November 2010
  • ...he children’s game Telephone, has less in common with the materiality of technology than with the sociability of interpersonal communication. The acoustic cou
    11 KB (1,690 words) - 10:42, 24 November 2010
  • ...information captured by the Phonodiek can be segmented in time. While the technology is analogue because it produces a continuous image over time, similar to a
    8 KB (1,302 words) - 10:52, 24 November 2010
  • ...ormed by players” (Galloway, 5). This article will not only focus on 3DO technology as ground-breaking for the home console, but will also examine how the cons ==Design and Technology==
    10 KB (1,626 words) - 10:54, 24 November 2010
  • Mossberg, Walter S., "Personal Technology," ''Wall Street Journal,'' Nov 4, 1993. pg. PAGEB.1, Eastern edition
    9 KB (1,472 words) - 10:41, 24 November 2010
  • ...ifact, the diorama thus provides an interesting exception to Foucault’s "technology of individuals" (qtd. in Crary 15) regulated by surveillance, as well as De
    9 KB (1,403 words) - 23:55, 7 April 2010
  • ...g location by aligning the viewing lens with the sighting vane. Though the technology dates back to the Native Americans in a primitive form (“As Told by Helio Primarily used as a technology of warfare, the design of the Heliograph can be seen as closely addressing
    11 KB (1,713 words) - 10:24, 24 November 2010
  • ...rg/wiki/Scent_of_mystery ''Scent of Mystery''], was ever released with the technology. ==Technology==
    7 KB (1,157 words) - 10:20, 24 November 2010
  • ...oncurrence, law and files mutually determine each other. A given recording technology entails specific forms and instances of the law” (xiii). Etiquette is the Vismann, Cornelia. ''Files: Law and Media Technology.'' Stanford: Stanford UP, 2008.
    9 KB (1,556 words) - 10:49, 24 November 2010
  • ==Technology== ...s a contributing factor to the industrial drive toward projection, as that technology could entertain multiple audience member simultaneously, resulting in great
    14 KB (2,162 words) - 10:17, 24 November 2010
  • Gitelman, Lisa. "Scripts, Grooves, and Writing Machines: Representing Technology in the Edison Era". Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1999 Ronell, Avital. "The Telephone Book: Technology, Schizophrenia, Electric Speech." Lincoln, NB: University of Nebraska Press
    9 KB (1,477 words) - 10:53, 24 November 2010
  • ...lds apart, even though events took place side-by side. By the early 1990s technology had advanced significantly enough that computer effects could convincingly Gitelman, Lisa. “Scripts, Grooves, and Writing Machines: Representing Technology in the Edison Era.” Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999. Print.
    11 KB (1,563 words) - 10:45, 24 November 2010
  • ...entirely over to the machine. This becomes sort of the reverse of the way technology has influenced the way we understand vision, as Jonathan Crary describes. F
    8 KB (1,309 words) - 10:20, 24 November 2010
  • ...to remediate similar design appearances and features from a prior media or technology, perhaps in this case for familiarity or legitimacy’s sake. ...nd projections of sound from unseen sources, one can see that for Kircher, technology “stood for the spectrum of artificial constructions where ‘the operativ
    11 KB (1,675 words) - 10:51, 24 November 2010
  • ==The Technology of Memory== ...ed with classical rhetoric and art of memory—was remediated in recording technology and psychoanalytic discourse at the turn of the 20th century. Through a br
    35 KB (5,403 words) - 10:34, 24 November 2010
  • ...nse. The familiar form of the bear made a new and potentially frightening technology appealing to young children; the cartoonish, mammalian body was humanoid e
    7 KB (1,175 words) - 10:19, 24 November 2010
  • ...d form our own developing imagery on the screen, the more valuable the new technology will be. At the least, it can remain but mindless electric wallpaper. (Reve
    9 KB (1,468 words) - 10:20, 24 November 2010
  • ...nymore, but we can see it as remediated forms in daily routine life as the technology used is in a very literal sense extinct. Unless there are definitely monume * Haraway, Donna. "A Cyborg Manifesto: Science, Technology, and Socialist-Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century," in Simians, Cyborgs
    8 KB (1,293 words) - 10:26, 24 November 2010
  • ...o can receive? What types of values are embedded in the affordances of the technology?
    10 KB (1,659 words) - 14:13, 3 May 2010

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