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studies
This page point to salient works about domestic informatics,
appliance design and usability.
It covers -
introductions
Andrew Odlyzko's 1999 article
on The visible problems of the invisible computer:
A skeptical look at information appliances is one
of the more incisive studies of convergence. Donald Norman's
The Invisible Computer (Cambridge: MIT Press
1998) is essential reading.
Michael Dertouzos' The Unfinished Revolution: Making
Computers Human-Centric (New York: HarperBusiness
2001), Why Things Bite Back: Technology & the
Revenge of Unintended Consequences (New York: Knopf
1996) by Edward Tenner,The Social Life of Information
(Boston: Harvard Business School Press 2000) by John Seely
Brown & Paul Duguid and 'Broadband Technologies, Techno-Optimism
and the “Hopeful” Citizen' by Matthew Allen
in Joel Weiss et al. [ed], The International Handbook
of Virtual Learning Environments (Berlin: Springer
2006) 1525–1547 are also of significance.
domestic informatics
Points of entry for literature on domestic informatics
are Ian Miles' Home Informatics: Information Technology
and the Transformation of Everyday Life (London:
Pinter 1988), the 2001 US National Science Foundation
study
The Application and Implications of Information Technologies
in the Home: Where are the Data and What Do They Say?
and 2000 A Taxonomy of Internet Appliances (PDF)
by Sharon Gillett, William Lehr, John Wroclawski &
David Clark.
ideologies
For ideology see Dolores Hayden's Redesigning the
American Dream: The Future of Housing, Work and Family
Life (New York: Norton 1984), Ruth Cowan's More
Work for Mother: the ironies of household technology from
the open hearth to the microwave (New York: Basic
Books 1983), Priscilla Brewer's From fireplace to
cookstove: technology and the domestic ideal in America
(Syracuse: Syracuse Uni Press 2000) and Susan Strasser's
Never done: a history of American housework (New
York: Pantheon 1982) and David Nye's superb Electrifying
America: social meanings of a new technology, 1880-1940
(Cambridge: MIT Press 1990), Mary Douglas' The World
of Goods: Towards an Anthropology of Consumption
(Harmondsworth: Penguin 1979) and The Social Shaping
of Technology: how the refrigerator got its hum (Milton
Keynes: Open University Press 1985) edited by Donal MacKenzie
& Judy Wajcman.
economics
Industry imperatives are explored in Alfred Chandler's
Inventing the Electronic Century: The Epic Story of
the Consumer Electronics & Computer Industries
(New York: Free Press 2001), Christina Hardyment's From
mangle to microwave: the mechanization of household work
(Cambridge: Polity Press 1988) and Virginia Postrel's
The Substance of Style (New York: HarperCollins
2003).
Devotees of the IETF RFC game will enjoy the 1998 Hyper
Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol RFC
(2324)
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