登入
選單
返回
Google圖書搜尋
Computerization Movements and Technology Diffusion
Margaret S. Elliott
Kenneth L. Kraemer
其他書名
From Mainframes to Ubiquitous Computing
出版
Information Today, Inc.
, 2008
主題
Business & Economics / Development / Economic Development
Computers / Computer Literacy
Computers / Data Science / General
Technology & Engineering / General
Technology & Engineering / Social Aspects
ISBN
157387311X
9781573873116
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=bBKbmI7EU9kC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Computerization movement (CM), as first articulated by Rob Kling, refers to a special kind of social and technological movement that promotes the adoption of computing within organizations and society. Here, editors Margaret S. Elliott and Kenneth L. Kraemer and more than two dozen noted scholars trace the successes and failures of CMs from the mainframe and PC eras to the current Internet era and the emerging era of ubiquitous computing. Through theoretical analyses, systematic empirical studies, field-based studies, and case studies of specific technologies, the book shows CMs to be driven by Utopian visions of technology that become part of the ether within society, creating a general bias in favor of computing adoption. The empirical studies presented here show the need for designers, users, and the media to be aware that CM rhetoric can propose grand visions that never become part of a reality, and reinforce the need for critical and scholarly review of promising new technologies.