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  • .../2010/09/19/magazine/classroom-technology.html/ The Evolution of Classroom Technology]
    3 KB (381 words) - 02:25, 24 November 2010
  • An example of magnetic tape sound recording technology, the 8-track eventually became a redesigned version of several existing tap
    7 KB (1,070 words) - 16:01, 22 November 2010
  • Roughly ten years later in 1843, the technology of the zoetrope and phenakistiscope would be combined. T.W. Naylor devised
    14 KB (2,108 words) - 14:27, 27 October 2010
  • ==Deliberately Flat Technology== ...comfortable with machines that could “read themselves” as representing technology, the media before CDs were still reading a text which, even if not quite pe
    23 KB (3,722 words) - 10:31, 24 November 2010
  • ...). The language of this patent makes it plain that he did not invent this technology, but instead made vast improvements upon the original, which consisted of a ...ectangular “tube” on rails. Time is clearly of the essence here; this technology would have been utterly useless had it not been extremely timesaving. Addi
    28 KB (4,387 words) - 10:41, 24 November 2010
  • ...d eventually be the most widely dispersed outgrowth of these advances, the technology and concept were first put to use in a variety of small-scale communication Today, the concept of a hotel annunciator is no longer embraced as a technology of service. More currently used for alarms, the annunciator has become a sa
    19 KB (3,144 words) - 10:34, 24 November 2010
  • ...d radio. One of the initial demonstrations of the news via radio facsimile technology was conducted on April 17th, 1946, when it successfully printed a four-colu ...or the newspaper via radio facsimile, there are many articles covering the technology including pictures of people posing next to the devices in their homes. Ad
    13 KB (2,015 words) - 10:54, 24 November 2010
  • ...hout needing a large crystal of an esoteric mineral" (Save Polaroid). This technology enabled not only the development of the Polaroid camera but sunglasses, 3-D ..." (The New York Times). Polaroid claimed that Kodak illegally copied their technology and "entered Polaroid's exclusive field" with their 1976 introduction of an
    28 KB (4,162 words) - 10:43, 24 November 2010
  • ...refuse to use Facebook and stick strictly to their cell phones; the newer technology is useful but slightly scary, with the potential for many drawbacks. While ...network is in fact the only truly dead medium posted on this page, as the technology used is in a very literal sense extinct (see: [[Where do media go to die?]]
    17 KB (2,692 words) - 10:42, 24 November 2010
  • ...ce nausea and dizziness which were reported during the early stages of the technology. These complaints have followed 3-D television from the beginning as the e Clapperton, Guy. "Technology: Inside IT: You won't believe your eyes when 3D TV becomes reality: Perfect
    9 KB (1,352 words) - 10:51, 24 November 2010
  • ...ns of music that revealed music to not be just a beautiful art but digital technology as well.
    12 KB (1,953 words) - 10:50, 24 November 2010
  • ...ect (film), and despite advancements that have been made with film-editing technology, there are certain filmmakers that continue to stand by this process. As we When the technology of digital editing systems entered the scene in the early 1990s, it brought
    10 KB (1,498 words) - 10:23, 24 November 2010
  • ...usive in terms of definition. There are numerous names for these types of technology that came into existence in the very early 1980's including Teletext, Video ...ficient key placements, Minitel locked users into a relatively inefficient technology that nonetheless still served an extremely valuable function" (Trumbull 61)
    34 KB (5,265 words) - 10:54, 24 November 2010
  • ...ty." Leonardo, Vol. 20, No. 2, Special Issue: Visual Art, Sound, Music and Technology (1987): 139-142. JStor. NYU. 8 Nov. 2007.
    17 KB (2,814 words) - 23:46, 7 April 2010
  • ...during daily data-processing is a hybrid-construction of the self and the technology. Varying degrees of active, controlled cognition were described in Hofmann ...o the subject's experience is clear; arguments and conversations about the technology appear and guide some parts of "Soliloquy," while the non-address of the re
    11 KB (1,739 words) - 10:54, 24 November 2010
  • The NeXTStep was an “object-oriented technology that Apple’s Pink engineers were just starting to develop” (Carlton 409 ===Object-oriented Technology===
    11 KB (1,857 words) - 10:44, 24 November 2010
  • ...tion is that an inadequacy of the semaphore telegraph is solved by another technology. To see signals miles and miles away, a telescope is needed. "Telescope mak Another important aspect of semaphore telegraphs is not about the technology itself. Rather, being situated on top of hills, semaphore telegraphs work w
    10 KB (1,491 words) - 10:43, 24 November 2010
  • ...makes this the most obvious, since there was literally a new communicative technology within a child’s toy right after this medium was invented. But “the ob ...tandard "toy" for children for centuries, so the only way that a new media technology could be marketed as a toy was to encase it in the most standard toy possib
    15 KB (2,414 words) - 10:33, 24 November 2010
  • ...with a deal of opposition. This can be seen as a pop and whistle of this technology. No matter how much training in the writing one can have, every piece tran
    11 KB (1,781 words) - 10:54, 24 November 2010
  • ...sonance to increase the sound energy itself, this is conceptually the same technology that ear trumpets use to amplify sound. The hand cupped over the ear can a ...could be attained by prison guards(Bennion 3). This implementation of the technology is unique because of its intended use, spying, which vastly differs from pr
    11 KB (1,790 words) - 10:42, 24 November 2010
  • ...ncy has now become almost completely technological, a matter of developing technology that can collapse the time between a sale and the verification of the card. ...cal range of their spending. Before the dominant problematic became one of technology, there were other problematics including the struggle over control of credi
    47 KB (7,569 words) - 10:33, 24 November 2010
  • ...chniques for tabulation required for statistical analysis. The Punch Card technology was a remediation of card catalogues, short hand writing systems, and the J ...for the invention. The lithograph, although not a direct precursor, was a technology that also reproduced visual patterns in the 19th century, with the prospect
    54 KB (8,647 words) - 10:48, 24 November 2010
  • ...n medicine, but many medical sociologists cite a shift in focus in medical technology from representational images to statistical modeling. "The digital image i ...t G. The High-Vacuum X-Ray Tube: Technological Change in Social Context. ''Technology and Culture'' vol. 38, no. 4: 852-890.
    4 KB (622 words) - 23:45, 7 April 2010
  • This technology proved useful for a variety of outlets, not just for postages stamps, but a ...onging but also recess bragging rights to the latest in sticker trends and technology.
    13 KB (2,129 words) - 10:45, 24 November 2010
  • ...s applications have changed in the seven decades it has been produced, the technology has largely remained the same, circumventing some issues of compatibility. ...a reel directly, and was also the first to have a 'Lite Attachment'. The technology for the product is that of the stereoscopic dual vision transparency, which
    20 KB (3,126 words) - 10:42, 24 November 2010
  • The early development of x-ray technology, beginning with the Roentgen Ray Tube in 1895, can be seen as a new way of ...lity of the act of representation. This is a useful way to think of x-ray technology in which electromagnetic radiation (a form of energy) goes through solid ma
    18 KB (2,939 words) - 10:49, 24 November 2010
  • ...) The Victrola is a remediation of the Musical Box, using much of the same technology in its process of automation. The winding lever is present in the mechanica ...ng and reproduction. The Victrola took the successful elements from of the technology employed by both the early phonograph, and the gramophone. The phonograph w
    32 KB (5,045 words) - 10:41, 24 November 2010
  • ...ing magnetism for geomancy—the divination of land and topography, with a technology referred to as the “the south-pointing spoon.” The process of magnetiz ...se sailors? Did it come from intermediary Arab sailors who had brought the technology from the Far East? It is now agreed upon that the compass arrived in Europe
    28 KB (4,426 words) - 23:47, 7 April 2010
  • ...es, although the market is no longer embodied in a specific place or media technology. The question of death is discussed more explicitly on the pages, [[Mediati ...tory, and which are placed outside of that history? When approaching a new technology from a historical perspective, how might one decide which prior forms of me
    3 KB (443 words) - 23:58, 7 April 2010
  • ...you make use of a device whose interface no longer works with any existing technology? ...reproducible for it to be extinct? Indeed, the reproducible of a specific technology is what makes patents so important: the schematic itself must be protected.
    4 KB (558 words) - 00:03, 8 April 2010
  • ...workers and peasants who did not want to part with Lenin. The rudimentary technology would not hold his body for long, and when freezing became unfeasible due t ...t relations had soured and it was out of the question to share such prized technology. The Chinese had to turn instead to the Vietnamese for assistance, and cre
    34 KB (5,614 words) - 10:51, 24 November 2010
  • ...? In other words, I am suggesting that materially inessential feature of a technology be co-opted into a necessity for artistic and political reasons.
    3 KB (529 words) - 23:57, 7 April 2010
  • ...requires to a certain extent the opening of the black box surrounding the technology. A prime example of this is the "[[obvious]]," i.e. those aspects of the technology that are used due to the particular historical context of the development o
    2 KB (391 words) - 23:45, 7 April 2010
  • ...he first installment of the mobile telephone, a pre-generation to cellular technology. ...hnological shortcomings of the mobile phone, but also a re-focusing of the technology on individual phone users, rather than telephony locales. (History of Mobil
    23 KB (3,655 words) - 10:44, 24 November 2010
  • ...f the telegraphone and what it was capable of which piqued the interest of technology writers, who were most interested in its use in relation to the telephone a ...recording in general was its broad applications. While almost all of the technology's uses never truly took root, the storage of audio data nevertheless ranged
    27 KB (4,244 words) - 10:51, 24 November 2010
  • ...codename Project ULTRA. These mathematicians used both high-speed machine technology as well as hand testing, to crack the code. By the early 1940’s, these m As Ratcliff posits, “Enigma…demonstrates how a new technology can quickly move from startlingly revolutionary to so familiar that its ope
    19 KB (3,044 words) - 10:54, 24 November 2010
  • ...meaning changed by temperature, basically--liquid crystals are the primary technology involved in 'thermochromic' and 'thermochromatic' media, and the basis for The technology has practical functions in medicine. It can be used to measure temperature
    16 KB (2,574 words) - 10:23, 24 November 2010
  • ==What BeOS said about technology==
    10 KB (1,543 words) - 17:01, 22 September 2010
  • ...ish the space that yawns between the stars” (Clarke, 114). Communication technology had pulled people and countries tightly together; geographic expanses of Ea ...shuttle to escape the earth’s gravitational force. In other words, the technology for long-term travel was foreseeable, but they puzzled over the problem of
    31 KB (4,589 words) - 12:30, 25 October 2010
  • ...by diazo-type printing machines, which in turn was replaced by “advanced technology” (Bellis) invented by Xerox. Computer aided design (CAD), and specificall Earle, James H. Drafting Technology. (Reading, Mass: Addison Wesley Publishing Company; 1986)
    5 KB (709 words) - 10:53, 24 November 2010
  • ...ypewriters) are still in use in the legal system alongside voice-to-speech technology in case of computer failure.
    12 KB (1,826 words) - 10:52, 24 November 2010
  • ...that is static, privatizing, and decorative in its function; the other, a technology that is dynamic, utilitarian, and ultimately democratizing. ...a few centuries old. One of the earliest recorded applications of elevator technology within the domestic sphere comes - not surprisingly - from Versailles, the
    14 KB (2,097 words) - 10:42, 24 November 2010
  • ...uctance to take a risk accepting a radically different (though flawed) new technology. It also exposed how perfection driven the Japanese business model is (in t ...display. But that was about to change with the partnership of Reflections Technology, a company from Massachusetts that invented mirror scanning stereoscopic di
    20 KB (3,286 words) - 10:49, 24 November 2010
  • "Spirit Photography" refers to the use of photographic technology, with or without the use of a camera, to document the existence of the supe
    10 KB (1,493 words) - 18:13, 11 December 2010
  • ...endly and form personal connections, and the rising popularity of personal technology. ...rtual caregiver (Allison, 172). Furthermore, the eye-catching and personal technology of the Tamagotchi made it easier for users to feel connected with their vir
    18 KB (2,790 words) - 13:24, 18 October 2010
  • ...ty of “inexpensive and reliable camera and display tubes,” finally, “technology was beginning to catch up with the concept” (Carson 284). ...e general public were allowed, for the first time, to actually try the new technology to talk to, and see, people across the country. Opinions were generally fa
    20 KB (3,266 words) - 02:18, 24 November 2010
  • ...e of New York were able to trade on Wall Street with the advent of the new technology, localized markets became more and more obsolete. The country lost at least ...re was still a need for a two-way printing telegraph type of communication technology.
    8 KB (1,209 words) - 10:22, 24 November 2010
  • == Audio Recording Technology & Wiretapping == ...’s coincides with a fall in popularity of the parrot as a pet. The first technology-based equivalent of eavesdropping is the tapping of telephone lines, also k
    12 KB (1,939 words) - 10:34, 24 November 2010
  • In the era of industrialized technology, Fuller found resource mismanagement inexcusable. One of the practices he m As is frequently the case with high investment technology, war served as the motivation for the next implementation of the Dymaxion h
    17 KB (2,687 words) - 10:25, 24 November 2010
  • ...digital convergence – the fusion of consumer electronics and information technology (Toshiba). When the market began to demand a new technology to follow the standard DVD several companies began to develop alternatives.
    13 KB (2,016 words) - 10:34, 24 November 2010
  • ...by diazo-type printing machines, which in turn was replaced by “advanced technology” (Bellis) invented by Xerox. The process used a lot of paper and, accordi Earle, James H. Drafting Technology. (Reading, Mass: Addison Wesley Publishing Company; 1986)
    6 KB (950 words) - 13:33, 27 September 2010
  • ...oretical changes in the way that society archives its own thoughts through technology. And so this dossier is more of a structure for a debate than it is a spec ...ost likely has little experience with this kind of marginalia, as computer technology has drastically changed the very idea of literary correction. Emendation,
    27 KB (4,451 words) - 10:31, 24 November 2010
  • Wilder quotes Neil Postman in saying that “A new technology does not add or subtract something. It changes everything” (240). This se ...subgroup of the technical milieu but the external milieu become worldwide technology: the dilution of the interior milieu into the exterior milieu has become es
    28 KB (4,386 words) - 10:25, 24 November 2010
  • Billmeyer, Fred W., and Max Saltzman. Principles of Color Technology. Second Edition ed. New York: Wiley-Interscience, 1981. 25-66.
    16 KB (2,610 words) - 10:49, 24 November 2010
  • ...cultural trope. This popularity reflects our cultural yearning for such a technology. It is the ultimate act of erasure. Often times a character will willingly
    8 KB (1,283 words) - 10:48, 24 November 2010
  • ...bookwheel was for the information savvy people of the day. Today there is technology that allows us to cross reference more things quicker, observe multiple thi The information technology and need for a vast view of things has called for computers to be capable o
    17 KB (2,882 words) - 23:48, 7 April 2010
  • In the era of industrialized technology, Fuller found resource mismanagement inexcusable. One of the practices he m
    2 KB (390 words) - 00:12, 8 April 2010
  • ...ough the formation of a record. Cornelia Vismann in ''Files: Law and Media Technology'' would not doubt concur: in her discussion of the modernization of Prussia ...e polygraph to the American public. While the polygraph failed to become a technology of litigation, administration or mercantile operation, it spoke to fundamen
    33 KB (5,119 words) - 10:50, 24 November 2010
  • ...st to release an all-sound newsreel on October 28, 1927, after testing the technology with two sound news films, recording celebrations of Charles Lindbergh's re ==Production and Technology==
    30 KB (4,473 words) - 10:34, 24 November 2010
  • ...truscans, from whom the usage was derived by the Romans" (Kunz 1). As the technology to work with metals and stone advanced, the form of the signet ring evolved ...us's ring both reflects and grants his authority by acting as an necessary technology for the authentication of self. Without his ring he is incapable of bringin
    29 KB (4,913 words) - 10:32, 24 November 2010
  • ...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
  • Haraway, D. “A Cyborg manifesto: Science, technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980's.” Simians, cyborgs, and women: The
    20 KB (3,153 words) - 10:49, 24 November 2010
  • ...taphorical reunion might appear to be an internalization of the typewriter technology into the body. To take the analogy of the human typewriter further, conside == Technology, Standardization, Modernism ==
    22 KB (3,372 words) - 10:52, 24 November 2010
  • ...extent to which it can be constructed is restricted by the capabilities of technology and sleight-of-hand style trickery that can be applied instantaneously.
    12 KB (1,874 words) - 10:22, 24 November 2010
  • ...gif|200px|thumb|left|German Magnetophon, the spoils of WWII]]Magnetic tape technology was first developed in Germany in 1934 as a method of recording audio. It ...actual time is supposed to be. However, Lisa Gitelman explains that as a technology gains acceptance in the home through commercialization, they become ubiquit
    18 KB (2,808 words) - 10:50, 24 November 2010
  • As computer technology advanced and more image-based computer games were released, the text-based
    14 KB (2,279 words) - 10:24, 24 November 2010
  • ...ng the release of color television until guaranteed that color programming technology would be equally receivable on both color and black-and-white sets. The FCC *Gitelman, Lisa. ''Scripts, Grooves, and Writing Machines: Representing Technology in the Edison Era''. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1999. Print.
    24 KB (3,492 words) - 10:21, 24 November 2010
  • ...nalysis of the freak show, "taught that the unimaginable was possible, and technology made material reality of ideas that had existed only in the real of the ima
    10 KB (1,632 words) - 10:48, 24 November 2010
  • ...onlooker, as she is engaged mentally by the object, nor is she bound by a technology relaying a “prescribed set of possibilities.” Absorption dissolves the
    14 KB (2,174 words) - 10:51, 24 November 2010
  • Vismann, Cornelia. Files: Law and Media Technology. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008.
    15 KB (2,410 words) - 10:25, 24 November 2010
  • ...ity would huddle together under one potential umbrella of marvelous future technology” (Gitelman, p.87). ...n Films had a narrative and the industry was becoming more standardized in technology, content and presentation which lead to the rise of venues just for movie d
    10 KB (1,498 words) - 10:50, 24 November 2010
  • Gitelman, Lisa. Scripts, Grooves, and Writing Machines: Representing Technology in the Edison Era. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999. Print. Vismann, Cornelia. Files: Law and Media Technology. Trans. Geoffrey Winthrop-Young. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008.
    22 KB (3,521 words) - 10:32, 24 November 2010
  • ...Roman Empire. Succeeding the continuous scroll, a radically serial, analog technology, the codex provided a sequential yet digital structure which enabled a new Vismann, Cornelia. ''Files: Law and Media Technology.'' Stanford University Press: Stanford. 2008. Print.
    19 KB (2,914 words) - 10:32, 24 November 2010
  • ...s to develop and incorporated a wide range of what was considered advanced technology at the time. ...rt time on the market, the virtual reality three-dimensional gameplay gave technology companies and video games manufacturers reason to research and experiment w
    13 KB (2,103 words) - 10:25, 24 November 2010
  • ...Durrant designed one of the first "score totalizers," an aspect of gaming technology that is still prevalent today. ...n of songs through connecting the device to a central music library. This technology was not new however at the time. Before coin-operated music machine compan
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  • === New Technology ===
    40 KB (6,433 words) - 10:53, 24 November 2010
  • The optical disc is a form of technology that first emerged in the late 1970s and progressively developed throughout ...ecome, in effect, a projectionist. And any suppression of the knowledge of technology thus requires a conscious activity: we cannot pretend that the discourse wi
    47 KB (7,451 words) - 10:44, 24 November 2010
  • ...cea.mdx.ac.uk/local/media/downloads/Dack/Technology_and_the_Instrument.pdf Technology and the Instrument],''musik netz werke - Konturen der neuen Musikkultur''.
    9 KB (1,360 words) - 18:27, 5 December 2010
  • Soviet society promoted science and technology and search of knowledge. It was often students who were studying engineerin
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  • ...a perfect example of encoded communication, as only those with the proper technology would be able to gain access to the intended message/text. But more importantly than simply affecting the history of computers and technology, the Colossus's story provides a deeper insight into the motivations for te
    27 KB (4,343 words) - 16:28, 15 December 2010
  • ...hnology, and instead, encouraged other companies to license the use of the technology. All that Philips required was that all other manufacturers adhere to the === Mix Tape Recording Technology ===
    30 KB (5,001 words) - 14:33, 22 November 2010
  • ...to Moscow and enrolled in the prestigious Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology. Fresh out of his university training, in 1989 along with partner Alexander ...corporate team headquartered in Illinois in the U.S., the development and technology team based in Moscow, and the manufacturers located in Taiwan, the Cybiko w
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  • ...a mass-market domestic product. The Genesis is an example of domesticated technology providing a way for users to perform feats of power with military origins i ...ards of computer cd-rom gaming and home theatre applications of CD storage technology.
    20 KB (2,868 words) - 23:30, 14 November 2010
  • ...y the Sony design team worked tirelessly to convert the bulky audio player technology into something that “would enable people to take their music with them” ...Walkman’s typically “Japanese” character, as a cutting edge piece of technology that embodies the best in “high-tech”. As the Walkman progressively bec
    25 KB (3,817 words) - 13:33, 15 November 2010
  • ...to share music, there were various other ways people have engaged with the technology. Interestingly enough, one of the more prevalent uses of LimeWire was actu ...erial, were protected from copyright infringement of its users because the technology was “capable of substantial noninfringing uses.” Through this ruling,
    22 KB (3,383 words) - 15:44, 17 November 2010
  • ...ompetitor, the industry also led the way for phonographs in amplification technology. Borrowing the innovations of radio and new electronically amplified instru
    34 KB (5,330 words) - 23:05, 15 November 2010
  • ...neighborhoods like Enchanted Forest (for kids) or Area 51 (for science and technology sites) were supposed to promote cyber-comraderie, but the "friending" featu [[Category:Technology]]
    7 KB (1,056 words) - 12:08, 17 November 2010
  • When it was first announced, Silicon Films’ Technology was considered to have the potential to be “as revolutionary as the Polar ...change in leadership might turn the company around and bring the vaporware technology into being, but it only lead them further towards a set of turbulent strate
    12 KB (1,928 words) - 16:46, 24 September 2013
  • ▪ 600 – Technology/Applied Science ...Norman D. "The catalogs of the future: A speculative essay. " Information Technology and Libraries 17.4 (1998): 183-187. ABI/INFORM Global, ProQuest. Web. 28
    13 KB (1,851 words) - 14:02, 6 December 2010
  • As we could easily assume, we do not think of the Abacus as a technology to improve speed and accuracy in the handling of numbers. It was just one o ...on. As Tom Gunning puts it, “If Benjamin’s method is fully understood, technology can reveal the dream world of society as much as its pragmatic rationalizat
    19 KB (3,037 words) - 20:30, 2 January 2012
  • ...concerns eliminated, but audiences were getting top of the line, new sound technology like the Dolby Digital or THX systems which were like nothing you had ever Now the latest trends in film technology and viewing are 3D and IMAX. It is now common for traditional theaters in r
    23 KB (3,776 words) - 16:21, 15 December 2010
  • ...roduction -- both of which helped the advancement of microphotographs as a technology. ...n Kodak Company purchased the rights to the machine in 1928, and moved the technology in a more commercial direction.
    5 KB (747 words) - 11:44, 6 December 2010
  • ...digital convergence – the fusion of consumer electronics and information technology (Toshiba). When the market began to demand a new technology to follow the standard DVD several companies began to develop alternatives.
    13 KB (2,016 words) - 02:30, 6 December 2010
  • ...second World War. This is mainly attributable to improvements in airplane technology as well as the Hindenburg disaster of 1937, killing 35 people and effective
    32 KB (5,101 words) - 19:56, 19 December 2010
  • ...e early seventies, and then it introduced the relationship between art and technology. Furthermore, unique artwork or portraits don't exist anymore. He asserted * Lovejoy,Margot. Art,Technology,and Postmodernism:Paradigms,Parallels,and Paradoxes,''Art Journal'',49(3),1
    14 KB (2,259 words) - 17:40, 8 December 2010
  • ...c technology to market. Collaboratively, Philips and MCA demonstrated the technology in 1972 and made it available for consumers on December 15, 1978. Philips = Disc Technology =
    8 KB (1,352 words) - 05:37, 8 December 2010
  • <blockquote>As technology continues to evolve, and the system of production that keeps costs relative ...Everything from massive switching stations, industrial computers, hospital technology, old schoolroom computers—in short, all obsolete electronics, even old ro
    43 KB (6,607 words) - 13:47, 20 December 2010
  • ...foundation for a unique and fascinating relationship between religion and technology. Throughout the 20th century, Spiritualists looked to emerging technologies ...ies-old spiritualist traditions of contacting the dead, but uses recording technology alongside a 'sensitive' listener as media to interface with the dead. Accor
    48 KB (7,550 words) - 11:23, 15 December 2010
  • ...re the latter engaged a cylindrical typewheel operated by a motor. The new technology of the typewheel allowed for many of the improvements mentioned previously ...odel, the “Selectric” typewriter, which included a pivoting ball. This technology can be viewed in action here: http://www.history.com/videos/history-rewind-
    15 KB (2,254 words) - 23:49, 14 December 2010
  • ...then everything that Foucault says about language hold true precisely for technology. In other words, the specificity that Kittler reserves for psychoanalysis a ...rst time, ownership was restricted to highly capitalized people. Today’s technology allows anyone to make a paper doll with a digital photograph. These may be
    20 KB (3,165 words) - 04:52, 15 December 2010