BKNTNATN.RVW 940331 The MIT Press 55 Hayward Street Cambridge, MA 02142-1399 Robert V. Prior, Editor - Computer Science prior@mitvma.mit.edu Maureen Curtin, Int'l Promo. - curtin@mit.edu "The Network Nation", Hiltz/Turoff, 1978/1993, 0-262-58120-5, U$24.95 This book was originally published in 1978. It was intended as an interdisciplinary study of this new communications medium known as computer conferencing (CC) or computer mediated communications (CMC). Fifteen years later, the authors decided to reissue the book--with almost no changes! Turns out to have been a sound decision. The authors have made a remarkably timeless work in an area of tremendous technological change. If not for the warnings in the preface to the second edition, it would probably be some time before even the astute reader realized the anachronisms of terminals as opposed to personal computers or workstations, 300 bps modems, and mainframes supporting thousands as opposed to networks supporting millions. Part of the value is the breath of topic. Basic concepts, social processes, cultural impacts, public access, research to be done, human interface studies, economics, politics and the human experience of communications are all brought together here. The scholarship is thorough. The writing is lucid. The analysis is prescient and insightful. (Each chapter starts with an excerpt from the mythical and futuristic "Boswash Times": some of the articles are startling in their accuracy. All are amusing and thought-provoking.) The original book was visionary. I appreciated the irony of the ending of the preface to the first edition. This foresaw that by the mid-1990s the home terminal would be as prevalent, and as commonly used, as the telephone. The original book entreated you to imagine that you were at breakfast with a cup of coffee-substitute (shades of the "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy"!) heated on your solar stove and beginning to read your computer-generated daily news--in 1994! Well, solar stoves are a rarity (especially around Vancouver) and it was afternoon, but I had already read "news" for the day, plus all my email and digests. I am, however, a rarity, myself. Even though Vancouver is a fairly well "connected" community, only two others in my townhouse complex have modems, and neither has access to the Internet. The authors recognize this as their major mistake. If they had to make one, that is undoubtedly the preferred one. As they note in the preface to the new edition, everything they foresaw originally will probably come to pass--it may just take a little longer. They also note, in discussion of the fact that CMC is taking longer than expected, the social inertia which resists changes to power and authority at all levels of society. It is instructive that the illustration they use comes from a corporate boardroom. Corporations have embraced the new data bases, financial modelling and record keeping capabilities of the computer. They have been less pleased with the active, slightly anarchic and socially powerful tools of computer mediated communications. A word of warning to boardrooms-- those who fail to master the new technologies for fear of losing place will likely lose all to those who master the technologies because of having nothing to lose. An excellent book; a classic in the field, yet it points to the future of a society as shaped by computer communications. copyright Robert M. Slade, 1994 BKNTNATN.RVW 940331 ====================== DECUS Canada Communications, Desktop, Education and Security group newsletters Editor and/or reviewer ROBERTS@decus.ca, RSlade@sfu.ca, Rob Slade at 1:153/733 Author "Robert Slade's Guide to Computer Viruses" (Oct. '94) Springer-Verlag