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Communication is dramatically changed by new
technologies. In the 20th century, we have seen the effects
of the telephone, radio and television, film, high-speed
printing, xerography, desk-top publishing, electronic mail.
These communication technologies have changed our
national political life, corporate management styles, family
connections, individual work habits. Additional change
in the next century is inevitable, as we adopt video
conferencing, multimedia, and internet technologies.
Many of the effects of new technologies are unpredictable:
the predicted 'paperless office' has failed to materialize,
for example, and word-processing software has
transformed the labor of writing in a way that was never
anticipated (and later was resisted) by computer
developers.
But some aspects of communication, both oral and written,
have not changed. Communication is still the social glue
that holds together nations, corporations, scientific
disciplines, and families. View all 12 works by Miller, Carolyn R. View all 17 works published by North Carolina State University |
 Communication in the 21st Century: The Original Liberal Art in an Age of Science and Technology http://www.chass.ncsu.edu/ccstm/pubs/NO1/INDEX.HTML
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peer-reviewed
Miller, Carolyn R. North Carolina State University 1996
Abstract: Communication is dramatically changed by new
technologies. In the 20th century, we have seen the effects
of the telephone, radio and television, film, high-speed
printing, xerography, desk-top publishing, electronic mail.
These communication technologies have changed our
national political life, corporate management styles, family
connections, individual work habits. Additional change
in the next century is inevitable, as we adopt video
conferencing, multimedia, and internet technologies.
Many of the effects of new technologies are unpredictable:
the predicted 'paperless office' has failed to materialize,
for example, and word-processing software has
transformed the labor of writing in a way that was never
anticipated (and later was resisted) by computer
developers.
But some aspects of communication, both oral and written,
have not changed. Communication is still the social glue
that holds together nations, corporations, scientific
disciplines, and families.
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