| History Books |
1. The Systematicity Arguments (Studies in Brain and Mind) 2. The Uses of Script and Print, 1300-1700 3. If These Halls Could Talk: A Historical Tour through San Francisco Recording Studios 4. The Ambient Century: From Mahler to Trance: The Evolution of Sound in the Electronic Age 5. For Honor, Glory, and Union: The Mexican and Civil War Letters of Brig. Gen. William Haines Lytle 6. Reformatting Politics: Information Technology and Global Civil Society 7. Electronic Music Pioneers 8. Bootstrapping: Douglas Engelbart, Coevolution, and the Origins of Personal Computing (Writing Science) 9. The Second Twentieth Century: How the Information Revolution Shapes Business, States And Nations (Hoover Institution Press Publication) 10. The History of Computers
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Dialog Semiconductor Display Drivers Chosen by QUALCOMM MEMS(R) Technologies, Inc. Dialog Semiconductor Plc has announced that the company’s display driver technology has been chosen by QUALCOMM MEMS Technologies, Inc. (QMT) for its iMoD™ displays. QMT, a wholly owned subsidiary of QUALCOMM Incorporated formed after the acquisition of Iridigm Display Corporation, is responsible for developing leading display technology for mobile products using advanced MEMS (micro-electromechanical-systems) technology. [PRWEB Jul 28, 2005]
Live Impressions from the LifeDrive Demo in NYC PalmAddict features palmOne Business Development Manager Stephen McDonnell as he presents the LifeDrive at the NYCDAUG-PALM user group meeting. The presentation notes cover many questions that have cropped up here at 1src.
Runaway Bride Says "I Do" to TV (E! Online) (Yahoo! News - Entertainment - Television) E! Online - Runaway bride Jennifer Wilbanks might have scooted away from the
altar, but she's not hesitating to say "I do" to a television project
about her misadventures.
StylusCentral.com Launches New Line of Cases for RIM Blackberry Mobile Communication Devices StylusCentral.com has launched a line of cases for Research in Motion's line of Blackberry wireless phone, email and data devices.
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| Books - Digital Business & Culture -
History |

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The Systematicity Arguments (Studies in Brain and Mind)
Authors: Kenneth Aizawa. Hardcover, 272 pagesPublisher: Springer Publication Date: 2002-11-30 Edition: 1 Reviews :
The Systematicity Arguments is the only book-length treatment of the systematicity and productivity arguments. It explores each of the arguments in detail addressing the explanatory standard that is involved in the arguments, what is to be explained in the arguments, how diverse theories have attempted to meet the explanatory challenges of systematicity, and how successful these attempts have been. Classical, Connectionist, Tensor Product Theories of cognitive architecture, among others, are examined. While not intended to be an introductory work, the book presupposes no familiarity with the leading theories of cognitive architecture or the systematicity and productivity arguments. The theories, the arguments, and their ramifications are explored in detail. The book is, therefore, suitable for advanced undergraduates, graduate students, and specialists in cognitive science, philosophy of psychology, and philosophy of mind. ...
$126
New Price: $20.25
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The Uses of Script and Print, 1300-1700
Authors: Hardcover, 312 pagesPublisher: Cambridge University Press Publication Date: 2004-01-05 Reviews :

Focusing on England, this volume investigates written communication in the two centuries before and after the introduction of printing. It explores the boundaries between script and print and considers the relationship of these media with the culture of speech. Contributors consider the applications of script and print by a variety of individuals, groups and communities in the spheres of religion, law, scholarship and politics. They also reassess long-standing assumptions about the impact of printing and the historical divisions it had come to represent....
$88
New Price: $73.25
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If These Halls Could Talk: A Historical Tour through San Francisco Recording Studios
Authors: Heather Johnson. Paperback, 368 pagesPublisher: Artistpro Publication Date: 2006-05-04 Edition: 1 Reviews :

If These Halls Could Talk: A Historical Tour Through San Francisco Recording Studios takes an in-depth look at San Francisco's colorful and diverse music and music recording history, covering both the recordings and recording studios that housed the jazz and blues of the '50s and psychedelic rock of the '60s, to the rock and funk of the '70s, punk and new wave of the '80s, and the alternative rock, R&B and hip-hop of the '90s through today. Leading Bay Area artists, producers, engineers, and studio owners take readers on a guided tour through some of San Francisco's top recording studios, venturing behind the scenes of some of popular music's hottest albums. Readers will learn about the recording techniques, the magic, and often unusual experiences that went into a wide range of recordings, including works by Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead, Santana, the Pointer Sisters, Herbie Hancock, Journey, Huey Lewis and the News, Chris Isaak, Faith No More, Green Day, and many more. In addition, If These Halls COuld Talk chronicles the history of the studios themselves. The book discusses the arrival, growth, and departure of studios in and around San Francisco, the myriad advancements in technology through the years and its effect on the recording industry, and how the San Francisco Bay Area's recording facilities have endured through economic ups and downs, increased competition, decreased demand, and the ever-changing, unpredictable music industry....
$29.99
New Price: $17.87
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The Ambient Century: From Mahler to Trance: The Evolution of Sound in the Electronic Age
Authors: Mark Prendergast. Hardcover, 368 pagesPublisher: Bloomsbury USA Publication Date: 2001-01-24 Reviews :
A comprehensive and absorbing look at the music of the twentieth century, with an introduction by Brian Eno. The 20th Century saw two revolutionary changes in music. First music was deconstructed from its previously strict form, moving from formal constraints to more accessible melodies. Second, the way in which music was generated radically changed as new electronic equipment inspired experiments with sound divorced from traditional acoustic instruments. More and more, innovative musical ideas became intertwined with technological change. Multi-track recording, editing, and improved microphones allowed for quieter, experimental elements to gain prominence. And with the advent of digital synthesizers, new music could be made by anyone and sound like almost anything.The Ambient Century is the definitive chronicle of a century of musical change. It reveals the drift from composers to non-musicians, from the single note to the sample. Encyclopedic, yet with a strong narrative, The Ambient Century covers hundreds of artists, including such diverse artists as Gustav Mahler (the pioneer of modern music), Phillip Glass, New Order, and Moby. Lively, compelling, and authoritative-and boasting an unmatched discography. The Ambient Century is a treat for music lovers of all kinds. ...
$32.95
New Price: $25.82
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For Honor, Glory, and Union: The Mexican and Civil War Letters of Brig. Gen. William Haines Lytle
Authors: William Haines Lytle. Hardcover, 264 pagesPublisher: University Press of Kentucky Publication Date: 1999-03-11 Reviews :

Cincinnati native William Haines Lytle volunteered for service in the Mexican War in late 1847. A pro-states' rights Democrat with strong family ties to Kentucky, he nevertheless chose to protect and defend the Union upon the outbreak of the Civil War. Lytle's Mexican War service primarily consisted of garrison duty, but during the Civil War he became known for his courage under fire and his devotion to his troops. He saw combat at Carnifex Ferry and Perryville, and was killed at Chickamauga while leading a valiant charge to stop Confederate troops storming through an opening in Union lines. His letters detail the ferocity of action on the western front and offer a glimpse of the interaction between Union officers and Southern civilians in the border states....
$40
New Price: $24.99
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Short News |
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An individual experience Sioux City Journal, IA -... In "Mickey's PhilharMagic," a 3-D movie starring the classic Disney characters, they get to sniff apple pie; in the new Epcot ride, "Soarin'," they get the ...
Lenovo IBM ThinkPad T43 Even though the purchase of IBM's computer division has been completed by Lenovo, the systems are still bearing the IBM name. Lenovo also intends to keep the ThinkPad name to ease the transition. Their most recent thing and light notebook,...
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Reformatting Politics: Information Technology and Global Civil Society
Authors: Jon Anderson. Jodi Dean. Geert Lovink. Paperback, 272 pagesPublisher: Routledge Publication Date: 2006-08-24 Edition: 1 Reviews :
Reformatting Politics examines the ways in which new information and communication technologies (ICTs) are being used by civil society organizations (CSOs) to achieve their aims through activities and networks that cross national borders. These new ICTs--the internet, mobile phones, satellite radio and television--have allowed these civil society organizations to form extensive networks linking the local and the global in new ways and to flourish internationally in ways that were not possible without them. The book consists of four sections containing essays by some of the top scholars and activists working at the intersections of networked societies, civil society organizations, and information technology. The book also includes a section that takes a critical look at the UN World Summit of Information Society and the role that global governance has played and will play in the use and dissemination of these new technologies. Finally, the book aims to influence this important and emerging field of inquiry by posing a set of questions and directions for future research. In sum, Reformatting Politics is a fresh look at the way critical network practice through the use of information technology is reformatting the terms and terrains of global politics....
$36.95
New Price: $34.97
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Electronic Music Pioneers
Authors: Ben Kettlewell. Paperback, 286 pagesPublisher: Artistpro Publication Date: 2001-05-01 Edition: 1 Reviews :

Author Ben Kettlewell presents an exhaustive text on the illustrious history of electronic music, from its beginnings with Leon Theremin to interviews with Dr. Robert Moog and artist Klaus Shulze. From software synths to Kraftwerk, even gangster rap, the electronic music explosion has made an impact on almost every aspect of the music industry. This exciting new book tells the stories of the people and inventions that revolutionized the musical sound palette. "Electronic Music Pioneers" is an expansive title filled with research and useful knowledge about the history and methods of electronic music with an extensive timeline of this music technology....
$29.95
New Price: $18.85
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Bootstrapping: Douglas Engelbart, Coevolution, and the Origins of Personal Computing (Writing Science)
Authors: Thierry Bardini. Paperback, 312 pagesPublisher: Stanford University Press Publication Date: 2000-12-01 Edition: 1 Reviews :
Bootstrapping analyzes the genesis of personal computing from both technological and social perspectives, through a close study of the pathbreaking work of one researcher, Douglas Engelbart. In his lab at the Stanford Research Institute in the 1960s, Engelbart, along with a small team of researchers, developed some of the cornerstones of personal computing as we know it, including the mouse, the windowed user interface, and hypertext. Today, all these technologies are well known, even taken for granted, but the assumptions and motivations behind their invention are not. Bootstrapping establishes Douglas Engelbart’s contribution through a detailed history of both the material and the symbolic constitution of his system’s human-computer interface in the context of the computer research community in the United States in the 1960s and 1970s.
Engelbart felt that the complexity of many of the world’s problems was becoming overwhelming, and the time for solving these problems was becoming shorter and shorter. What was needed, he determined, was a system that would augment human intelligence, co-transforming or co-evolving both humans and the machines they use. He sought a systematic way to think and organize this coevolution in an effort to discover a path on which a radical technological improvement could lead to a radical improvement in how to make people work effectively. What was involved in Engelbart’s project was not just the invention of a computerized system that would enable humans, acting together, to manage complexity, but the invention of a new kind of human, “the user.” What he ultimately envisioned was a “bootstrapping” process by which those who actually invented the hardware and software of this new system would simultaneously reinvent the human in a new form.
The book also offers a careful narrative of the collapse of Engelbart’s laboratory at Stanford Research Institute, and the further translation of Engelbart’s vision. It shows that Engelbart’s ultimate goal of coevolution came to be translated in terms of technological progress and human adaptation to supposedly user-friendly technologies. At a time of the massive diffusion of the World Wide Web, Bootstrapping recalls the early experiments and original ideals that led to today’s “information revolution.”
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Some revolutions are thoroughly televised. When Douglas Engelbart first demonstrated small-w windows and a funny wooden device called a mouse back in 1968, interest jumped quickly and he became the progenitor of the PC. Now, less widely known than the successful entrepreneurs who made billions from his innovations, his story deserves deeper attention as an outstanding example of practical creative research. Communications professor Thierry Bardini examines the scope of his work before and during his tenure at the Stanford Research Institute in Bootstrapping, a thoughtful history of an underreported story. Bardini cleverly sidesteps the postmodern superanalysis of his colleagues to present a clear, straightforward glimpse into Engelbart's environment of inspiration. As an engineer familiar with the earliest computers, he quickly came to understand that their complexity could rapidly outpace human ability to cope--and thus was born the concept of the "user." His team used their computing power to determine how best to use their computing power--a reflexive assignment of profound brilliance--and churned out novel concepts and designs faster than their contemporaries could absorb them. How and why this occurred as it did is the focus of Bardini's research, and students of creativity and the history of computing will have fits of ecstasy that he has compiled his work so accessibly. Better still, Bootstrapping shows research done right and is essential reading for R&D types everywhere. --Rob Lightner ...

$26.95
New Price: $15
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The Second Twentieth Century: How the Information Revolution Shapes Business, States And Nations (Hoover Institution Press Publication)
Authors: Jean-Jacques Rosa. Paperback, 390 pagesPublisher: Hoover Institution Press Publication Date: 2006-10-27 Reviews :
The universal consequences of the revolution in information technology The worldwide wave of democratization and the nearly total disappearance of communism at the end of the twentieth century were major economic and political changes of our time. These earth-shaking changes lead us to raise the question, Why now? Why did these developments occur as they did, when they did? In this book, Jean-Jacques Rosa offers an analysis of the "grand cycle" in social organization of the twentieth-century. He shows how the transformation in communication and information technology has led to the downfall of twentieth-century political and corporate hierarchies and is a driving force behind today's democratic free-market trend. The author reveals the universal contemporary consequences, both good and bad, of the information technology revolution. He explains how it is bringing relentless corporation downsizing and shrinking bureaucratic government structures but will also continue to be a factor in the rise of terrorism and secessionist and regionalist movements around the world. Rosa also brings an important historical perspective to current developments, explaining why democracy was abandoned by nearly every country in the world between the 1920s and 1960s and why totalitarian regimes prospered in the 1950s but began to rapidly fall behind democracies in the 1980s. Jean-Jacques Rosa's detailed economic, organizational, and technical analysis presents a captivating insight into the history, politics, and ideology of corporations and nation-states at the beginning of the twenty-first century. Jean-Jacques Rosa is a professor of economics and finance at Institut d'Edtudes Politiques (Sciences Po, Paris) and dean of the MBA Sciences Po Program, which he launched there in 1993. He is a member of the Mont Pélerin Society, the American Economic Association, and the American Finance Association....

$15
New Price: $2.9
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The History of Computers
Authors: Les Freed. Paperback, 150 pagesPublisher: Ziff Davis Pr Publication Date: 1995-04 Reviews :

From the authors of other successful How It Works books, The History of Computers will complement every computer user's library. Illustrations....
$24.95
New Price: $10.37
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