Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T21:26:16.851Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Hypertext and multimedia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 October 2008

Abstract

The evolution and potential of linked aspects of the electronic revolution that could radically change perceptions of the printed word

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1Hodges, AndrewAlan Turing – the enigma of intelligence Unwin 1983Google Scholar
2Palfreman, Jon and Doron, SwadeThe Dream Machine BBC 1991Google Scholar
3 ‘Music was always a vital accompaniment, even at Lumiére’s first showings of the cinematograph in the 1890s … what so-called silent cinema lacked was not sound but synchronised speech.’ Armes, Roy On Video Routledge 1988Google Scholar
4 For example, Smell-O-Vision (1960) and AromaRama (1959), and earlier experiments with odours in the cinema made in 1906 and 1929, noted in Katz, Ephraim The International Film Encyclopedia Macmillan 1980Google Scholar
5Davis, Philip J and Reuben, HershThe Mathematical Experience Pelican 1983Google Scholar
6Bush, Vannevar ‘As we may think’ in Atlantic Monthly July 1945, quoted in Lambert, S. and Ropiequet, S., eds. CD-ROM – the new papyrus Microsoft Press 1986Google Scholar
7Engelbart, D.C., and English, W.K.A research center for augmenting human intellect. In Proceedings of the 1968 Fall Joint Computer Conference (Montvale, NJ 1968), AFIPS Press, 395410Google Scholar
8Nelson, T.H. ‘Dream Machines: New Freedoms through Computer Screens – A Minority Report’ issued with Computer Lib: You Can and Must Understand Computers Now, Chicago, IL: Hugo’s Book Service, 1974Google Scholar
9Ted, Nelson, keynote address, Hypertext II, University of York, 28–29th June 1989Google Scholar
10Aldis, H.G. The Printed Book, Cambridge University Press, 1941Google Scholar
11Postman, Neil, Amusing ourselves to death: public discourse in the age of show-business Heinemann 1985Google Scholar
12 The Guardian, ‘The OED on a metallic beer mat’ Jack Schofield June 25th 1992Google Scholar
13 The recently published ‘electronic book’ of The Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams allows searching for any word whatsoever, throughout its 1427 pages (published by The Voyager Company 1991)Google Scholar
14Ted, Nelson, keynote address, Hypertext II, University of York, 28–29th June 1989Google Scholar
15Laub, Leonard. What is CD-ROM? In Lambert, S. and Ropiequet, S., eds. CD-ROM–the new papyrus Microsoft Press 1986Google Scholar
16Eco, Umberto, The Role of the Reader, Hutchinson, 1981Google Scholar
17Calder, RitchieMan and the Cosmos Pelican 1970Google Scholar
18Hughes, Robert The Shock of the New BBC, 1980Google Scholar
19Howard, Graham et al. of Art of Memory Twelfth Night (CD-ROM for Macintosh), published by Xploratorium, Anglia Polytechnic University 1992Google Scholar
20Winter, RobertBeethouven’s Symphony No 9 (Audio CD and Macintosh disk), published by The Voyager Company 1989Google Scholar