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- Date: Mon, 06 Feb 1995 14:25:05 EST
- From: Rob Slade <roberts@mukluk.decus.ca>
- Subject: "Straight Talk About the Information Superhighway"
-
-
- BKSTINSH.RVW 941226
-
- "Straight Talk About the Information Superhighway", Goldsborough, 1994, 1-
- 56761-513-9, U$19.99/C$26.99
- %A Reid Goldborough
- %C 8219 Northwest Blvd., Indianapolis, IN 46278
- %D 1994
- %G 1-56761-513-9
- %I Alpha Books/MacMillan Publishing, USA
- %O U$19.99/C$26.99 800-858-7674
- %P 340
- %T "Straight Talk About the Information Superhighway"
-
- Yes, by all means, let us have some straight talk about the
- information superhighway. The author waffles around with terms like
- "vehicle for the delivery ... of ... multimedia," but the reality is
- that the phrase was and is a speech-writer's icon. The slogan is very
- environmentally friendly: it has been reused in ever-broader situations,
- recycled in more promotions and speeches, and, in the process, reduced
- almost to meaninglessness. Goldsborough, in common with many who have
- only a tenuous grasp on the concepts, attempts to marry the widespread,
- anarchic, and still experimental Internet with the tightly-controlled
- "providers" of electronic media. (He also attempts to expand the
- collection of information supercliches with "infopike". Since he uses
- this to draw an analogy to the toll-road turnpikes of the northeastern
- United States, it is easy to see where his sympathies lie.)
-
- The book is a collection of enthusiastic essays about life in the telecom-
- rich future, with a piece concluding each chapter by some politician,
- "industry leader", Famous Person, or other "expert". Sometimes, it's
- hard to determine whether the "viewpoint" is an addendum to the chapter,
- the chapter is an introduction to the viewpoint, or whether both are related
- solely by proximity.
-
- The author must be sensitive, in advance, to possible charges that
- this material is all very "blue sky". After the opening story, he
- argues that this is not a fantasy, but that future technology will be
- very much like it. Of course, the technologies presented -- email,
- multimedia extensions, teleconferencing, voice recognition and
- macros -- are all available *now*, but it is obvious that Goldsborough
- is not really experienced in the most effective ways to use them.
-
- This is an extended series of the usual mass-media magazine articles,
- high on "gee whiz!" and low on content.
-
- copyright Robert M. Slade, 1994 BKSTINSH.RVW 941226. Distribution
- permitted in TELECOM Digest and associated publications.
-
-
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