91st out of 150 books
—
125 voters
Interface Culture: How New Technology Transforms the Way We Create and Communicate
"As our machines are increasingly jacked into global networks of information, it becomes more and more difficult to "imagine" the dataspace at our fingertips, to picture all that complexity in our mind's eye . . . Representing all that information is going to require a new visual language, as complex and meaningful as the great metropolitan narratives of the 19th-century n...more
Hardcover, 264 pages
Published
October 29th 1997
by Harper San Francisco
(first published 1997)
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Some technology books hold up for years after the technologies they discuss have become obsolete. This is not one of those books. Johnson has some interesting theories and paradigms for how we should conceptualize our digital world but you don't really need to read the whole book to learn about them.
Interface Culture is quite postmodern in that it compares the digital shift to various shifts in media and communication throughout history and literature. I took away some interesting concepts such...more
Interface Culture is quite postmodern in that it compares the digital shift to various shifts in media and communication throughout history and literature. I took away some interesting concepts such...more
English/Portuguese
This rating is only for the brazilian portuguese edition of this book: avoid it. I gave mine copy.
The original version I rated with 3 stars.
It is a very basic book, even int its category. The only chapter I feel ok is the last one: agents.
Essa estrela é apenas para a edição brasileira deste livro: evite-a, a não ser que você não tenha acesso a outra edição.
Para a versão original eu dei 3 estrelas.
É um livro muito básico, mesmo para uma divulgação científica. O único capítulo q...more
This rating is only for the brazilian portuguese edition of this book: avoid it. I gave mine copy.
The original version I rated with 3 stars.
It is a very basic book, even int its category. The only chapter I feel ok is the last one: agents.
Essa estrela é apenas para a edição brasileira deste livro: evite-a, a não ser que você não tenha acesso a outra edição.
Para a versão original eu dei 3 estrelas.
É um livro muito básico, mesmo para uma divulgação científica. O único capítulo q...more
Apesar de pouco usuais, as metáforas que Johnson utiliza tanto em Cultura da Interface foram bem recebidas. Ele acredita que quando CI foi lançado, em 1997, havia a impressão de que alguém precisava traduzir o discurso sobre o mundo ciber em um contexto mais tradicional e literário. Se falava muito em "mudanças de paradigma" e deixar para trás o mundo impresso e os elementos de continuidade quase não eram destacadas. "Como meu livro fazia essa ponte entre os dois mundos, ele acabou sendo recebid...more
There were any number of these "technology and culture" books churned out in the 1990's for a mass market, but this one is a keeper. On the one hand, Johnson is insightful and restrained enough to age well; many of his contemporaries look ridiculous in retrospect. On the other hand, the book simultaneously acts as a fascinating historical artifact. There are any number of intriguing possibilities that never amounted to anything. Don't be scared away by the year of publication: this book is worth...more
Nov 07, 2010
Sara Q
rated it
5 of 5 stars
Recommends it for:
Anyone with even a passing interest in how we think about computers.
I am loving this book and have fantasies about teaching a class using this as a textbook. It's like opening a time capsule from 1997 with wonderful surprises inside, such as the very first computer mouse and the views of computers in the 1940s, 1980s, and 1997. To put this book in some context - google.com and "blog" didn't even appear until a few months after this book was published, which makes his points about visual metaphor in the modern interface even more interesting, i think. Awesome lit...more
Jul 25, 2009
C. S. Soares
is currently reading it
Aguarde...
An interesting discussion of the influence of computers and the internet on our society.
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Steven Johnson is the author of the bestsellers Where Good Ideas Come From, The Invention of Air, The Ghost Map, Everything Bad Is Good For You, and Mind Wide Open, as well as Emergence and Interface Culture. He is the founder of a variety of influential websites—most recently, outside.in—and writes for Time, Wired, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal. He lives in Marin County, Califor...more
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