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The Victorian Internet: The Remarkable Story of the Telegraph and the Nineteenth Century's On-line PioneersTom Standage
יצא לאור ע"י הוצאת Walker & Company,
שפת הספר: אנגלית |
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The Victorian Internet tells the colorful story of the telegraph's creation and remarkable impact, and of the visionaries, oddballs, and eccentrics who pioneered it, from the eighteenth-century French scientist Jean-Antoine Nollet to Samuel F. B. Morse and Thomas Edison. The electric telegraph nullified distance and shrank the world quicker and further than ever before or since, and its story mirrors and predicts that of the Internet in numerous ways.
"With every new technology, we overestimate how quickly people change their behavior. This dot-com cult classic compares Web fever to the awe of the telegraph. When Queen Victoria sent the first transatlantic cable to President Buchanan in 1858, the London Times said that the invention 'has half undone the Revolution of 1776,' and torch-bearing revelers, celebrating the cable's completion, nearly burned down New York's City Hall. Publisher James Gordon Bennett rued: 'Mere newspapers must submit to destiny and go out of existence.' What was the best way to profit? Faster communications created our Information Age, but the telegraph industry was a short-lived wonder. By 1880, Western Union carried 80% of the traffic. Then came the phone."—L. Gordon Crovitz, The Wall Street Journal
“Standage has written a lively book on the telegraph and its roles in helping 19th century business and technology grow . . . The Victorian Internet demonstrates engagingly that not even the 21st century technology is totally new.”—Denver Post
“[The telegraph’s] capacity to convey large amounts of information over vast distances with unprecedented dispatch was an irresistible form, causing what can only be called global revolution.”—Washington Post
“An entertaining primer on a complex subject of increasing interest.”—Los Angeles Times Sunday Book Review
"One of the most fascinating books of the dotcom era . . . Standage is a good storyteller, and provides an engaging account of the rise and fall of the telegraph."—The Financial Times
"Blends anecdote, suspense and science into richly readable stuff."—The Independent
“A fascinating walk through a pivotal period in human history.”—USA Today
"Standage tells his fascinating story in an engaging, readable style, from the moment a bunch of Carthusian monks get suckered into a hilarious human electrical-conductivity experiment in 1746 to the telegraph’s eventual eclipse by the telephone. If you’ve ever hankered for a perspective on media Net hype, this book is for you.”—Hari Kunzru, Wired
"Richly detailed . . . Standage's writing is colourful, smooth and wonderfully engaging."—Smithsonian magazine
"A new technology will connect everyone! It's making investors rich! It's the Internet boom—except Samuel Morse is there!"—Fortune magazine
“This book should be essential reading for those caught up in our own information revolution.”—Christian Science Monitor
“I was simply fascinated by this book. It contains parallels between the reception of the telegraph and the Internet which I knew nothing about.”—Vinton Cerf, co-inventor of the Internet
"An inspired and utterly topical rediscovery of the emergence of the earliest modern communications technology."—William Gibson, author of All Tomorrow's Parties
"A great read . . . The book makes the argument that the telegraph in its day was much more revolutionary than the internet is in our day."—Jimmy Wales, co-founder of Wikipedia.org
“An admirably efficient and concise telling of the story of the rise and decline of the telegraph. As with all good case histories, this one excites the mind with parallels to present day experience.”—Henry Petroski, author of The Pencil: A History of Design and Circunstance
"An almost unputdownable account of a technical revolution of a magnitude and impact that in many ways arguably was larger than that of the Internet . . . a useful and very rewarding . . . reading for anyone."—Dr. Henrik Nilsson, University of Nottingham
“A lively, short history of the development and rapid growth a century and a half ago of the first electronic network, the telegraphs, Standage’s book debut is also a cautionary tale in how new technologies inspire unrealistic hopes for universal understanding and peace, and then are themselves blamed when those hopes are disappointed.”—Publishers Weekly
“A fascinating overview of a once world-shaking invention and its impact on society. recommended to fans of scientific history.”—Kirkus Reviews
“This lively, anecdote-filled history reveals that the telegraph changed the world forever—from the hand-carried-message world to an instantaneous one . . . Standage has it all here, including the role the telegraph played in war (Crimea), spying (the Dreyfus affair, in which Cap
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