<p><b>How we can inventβbut not predictβthe future of cities.</b></p><p>We cannot predict future cities, but we can invent them. Cities are largely unpredictable because they are complex systems that are more like organisms than machines. Neither the laws of economics nor the laws of mechanics apply
The Media Lab: inventing the future at MIT
β Scribed by Stewart Brand
- Publisher
- Viking
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 329
- Edition
- 1st
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
PREFACE
......Page 12
1 DEMO OR DIE
......Page 22
Ej Amphibian
......Page 24
g Teething Rings
......Page 28
Β° The Boggle Factor
......Page 32
2 NEWMEDIA 1 RECEIVING
......Page 36
Β° Digital Ears
......Page 39
^ Dense Media
......Page 40
^ The E-Mail Proletariat
......Page 42
0 The VCR Proletariat
......Page 45
jΕΎj The Sun Never Sets on the Phone Company
......Page 49
3 TERMINAL GARDEN
......Page 54
^ Personal Newspaper
......Page 55
Β° Personal Television
......Page 58
o Broadcatch
......Page 61
^ Conversational Desktop
......Page 64
Ej Why Programmers Work at Night
......Page 75
4 NEWMEDIA 2 SENDING
......Page 80
Jjj TV Is Trying
......Page 82
j=j The Satellite Proletariat
......Page 84
Β° Optical Fiber Strikes Back
......Page 86
5 THE SCIENCE OF APPARITION
......Page 90
Ej Intelligent Television
......Page 92
Β° Paperback Movies
......Page 97
g Art for Inventionβs Sake
......Page 101
^ 3D Comes Back
......Page 102
Β° Talking Heads
......Page 110
6 VIVARIUM
......Page 114
jjj Artificial Ecology
......Page 116
Β° Devil
......Page 120
Ej Player Pianos of the Future
......Page 126
^ Animating Virtual Reality
......Page 129
Β° Flexoids
......Page 135
7 HENNIGAN SCHOOL
......Page 138
Β° One Student, One Computer
......Page 139
β‘ LEGO/Logo
......Page 143
^ Bug Appreciation
......Page 145
8 THE ROOM WHO WILL GIGGLE
......Page 150
^ The Golden Age of Communication Science
......Page 153
Β° Architecture Machine Group
......Page 156
Ej Eyes as Output
......Page 186
Ej The Founding Image and the Connecting Idea
......Page 191
9 FUNDING THE FUTURE, FINDING THE FUTURE
......Page 198
jjj Nothing Proprietary
......Page 199
|=j From American Military to Ej Japanese Corporate
......Page 204
0 Users of the Future
......Page 218
10 LIFE IN PARALLEL
......Page 224
s
......Page 244
^ Information Wants to Be Free
......Page 245
j=j The Invited Persuader
......Page 250
Ej Information Wants to Be (Politically) Free
......Page 254
j=j Digital Faux
......Page 262
o Metacomputer
......Page 269
12 THE WORLD INFORMATION ECONOMY
......Page 272
Ej World Money
......Page 273
o World Entertainment
......Page 278
Β° Fading Nations
......Page 282
^ The Global City
......Page 287
13 QUALITY OF LIFE
......Page 294
0 Personal Renaissance
......Page 295
Cj Communication Ecologists
......Page 301
|U Humanism Through Machines
......Page 305
BIBLIOGRAPHY
......Page 308
INDEX
......Page 312
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Imagine a time before everyone stared at a screen, before fonts, icons, mice, and laser printers, before Apple and Microsoft? But in El Segundo and Palo Alto, Xerox engineers were dreaming and secretly building the modern personal computer. Who were they? Why did corporate management just want to se
1 Introduction -- 2 Missed opportunities: The beginnings of electronics -- 3 From Wireless to Radio -- 4 Seeing by electricity -- Development of Television -- 5 Seeing a hundred miles -- Radar -- 6 The Box -- Television takes over -- 7 Spinning discs -- Recorded music -- 8 The crystal triode -- The
1 Introduction -- 2 Missed opportunities: The beginnings of electronics -- 3 From Wireless to Radio -- 4 Seeing by electricity -- Development of Television -- 5 Seeing a hundred miles -- Radar -- 6 The Box -- Television takes over -- 7 Spinning discs -- Recorded music -- 8 The crystal triode -- The