216 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
216 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Multimedia - worse than Tomorrow's Schools?
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This is a column from an issue of Macworld, about the dangers of the
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upcoming multimedia 'revolution'. I think it's important to be aware of
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just what may lie behind the hype and marketing. Think.
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With thanks to Mark Norman, who typed it all in....
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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THE END OF LITERATURE
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Multimedia is Television's insidious offspring.
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By Steven Levy
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(C) 1990 Macworld Communications Inc.
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Multimedia has become a certified buzzword in computerdom, so much
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so that the only people who's heads don't drop to the table when that word is
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intoned are those who have something to sell. At the heart of the instant
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boredom concerning this presumably exciting concept is overhype. The
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promise of multimedia is just a little too far ahead of what Macintoshes
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(and other PC's, including those of IBM, a company also touting multimedia
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as the platform of the future) can presently deliver. And besides, in the
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mantra-like repetition of the word, its definition has fuzzed to the point of
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near-meaningless. What is multimedia, anyway? Should we care?
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We should care very much. Because despite its vague beginnings,
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multimedia is just as potent as its myriad promoters say it is. The forces of
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history almost dictate that it will succeed, and in the not-distant future,
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multimedia will be so easy to produce that it will be pandemic as a means
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of communication.
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But no one, at least to my knowledge, has anticipated the potentially
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disastrous effects of multimedia's success. So please say you read it here
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first: multimedia will hasten the end of literacy. Despite the fact that its
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promoters are almost universally well intentioned, multimedia's lasting
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legacy will be the debasement of the remaining forms of communication in
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this country that have not already been debased by the perpetually widening
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gyre of television.
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Tale of the Tube
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First of all, let's consider the nature of multimedia. Once you strip it
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bare of its considerable pretensions, multimedia is essentially one thing:
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computer applications that aspire to being television. Once you add video-
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quality images, high resolution animation, and high-fidelity sound to
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computer files, you've got your MTV. That's why some folks are calling this
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Desktop MTV. (Wimps call it Desktop Media - same difference.) Presumably,
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these multimedia capabilities aid the user in communicating and learning.
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But this is a different form of communication we're talking about,
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something that, according to Business Week magazine, "could change the
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way people work, learn and play." How is multimedia different? With colours
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and pictures and noises and motion, it's oriented not to the mind, but to the
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senses and the gut - like television. Multimedia disregards the previous
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communications paradigm: the person as reporter, blending logic, language
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and perhaps illustrative charts in order to inform or compel. The new
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paradigm sees the user as a television director, most often one who works
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in the advertising business.
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The result is a debasement of content, because the language of
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television, as convincingly argued by New York University professor Neil
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Postman in his book "Amusing Ourselves to Death" (Penguin, 1985), is
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inherently incapable of promoting complex discourse - style _always_
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overwhelms substance. Postman writes, "Television's conversations
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promote incoherence and triviality...the phrase 'serious television' is a
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contradiction in terms...and television speaks in only one persistent voice -
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the voice of entertainment."
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Entertainment, of course, is the bottom line of multimedia. Just
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listen to its promoters. (Most of them are marketing men like John Sculley.)
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Invariably they describe these innovative modes of expression as "exciting"
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or - the most common description of all - "sexy". These adjectives are
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applied regardless of the content of the concepts or facts to be processed
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through the multimedia mill. Multimedia deals solely with the style in
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which information is conveyed. Thoughts are permitted, but they can't look
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like thoughts - you have to dress them up like showgirls. Sooner or later you
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realise that you communicate more effectively in this medium if you ditch
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complex thoughts altogether.
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The ethos of multimedia was unwittingly expressed recently in a New
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York Times op-ed piece written by Robert W. Pittman, the television
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executive who created MTV. He argues, in essence, that the postwar
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generation of so-called TV babies have grown accustomed to, indeed are
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entitled to, the short-term, emotion-geared, nonintellectually engaging
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forms of discourse exemplified by television news and music video clips.
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Pittman suggested that politicians and educators should use even more of
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this form of communication. He wasn't speaking of computers, but
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multimedia fits right into his vision: it stretches the ability of computers
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to cater to the short attention spans and nonlinear thinking processes of
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nonliterate TV babies. Thus we face a future where our business reports and
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school papers aspire to the communicative standards of a Def Leppard clip
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in MTV heavy rotation.
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Will It Fly?
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We see a good example of this TV baby communication in the
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justifiably excoriated Apple advertising campaign in which some would-be
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geniuses in some corporation hatch the idea of a "helocar," and proceed to
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convince their bosses to give the project a thumbs-up. What bothers me
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about the ads is that by using multimedia to illustrate the concept - making
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a kinetic report chock-full of exploding charts and flying vehicles - the
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main effort is spent not in doing the hard work of figuring out whether or
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not the thing will literally fly, but in creating the sexy images that will get
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their bosses all heated up about the concept. What makes the workers
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successful is not the idea, but the flashy presentation. Who cares whether
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the helocar makes financial sense? Look at it fly!
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Essentially, the ad campaign views workers, even engineers, as
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marketers whose job it is to sell ideas to their superiors. That may be a
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valid interpretation of part of an engineer's job, but placing the heavy
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artillery of Madison Avenue in the hands of an engineer will likely do much
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more harm to the process than good. Those tools are effective precisely
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because of their ability to bypass logic and access emotion. The victory goes
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to the engineer who can make the best commercial - not the best vehicle.
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This process almost guarantees that choices will be made on
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irrelevant criteria. To quote Neil Postman again, "The commercial disdains
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exposition, for that takes time and invites argument. It is a very bad
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commercial indeed that engages the viewer in wondering about the validity
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of the point being made...Moreover, commercials have the advantage of vivid
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visual signals through which we may easily learn the lessons being taught.
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Among those lessons are that short and simple messages are preferable to
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long and complex ones; that drama is to be preferred over exposition; that
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being sold solutions is better than being confronted with questions about
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problems."
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This is what we want to introduce as the standard means of
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communicating? Obviously, yes. Catherine Nunes, in charge of multimedia in
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Apple's publishing, presentation and audio visual markets, told me that it
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was "very likely" that the writing tools of the future would be able to
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process sound and video images as well as words.
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Lowering Higher Ed.
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If multimedia in business isn't bad enough, consider the potential
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effects of multimedia in education. Here again, this platform is being touted
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as a beneficial revolution. No on has bothered to ask, "What are we
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revolting against?" The answer, of course, is reading and writing. Implicit
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in all the hype about multimedia is the premise that language alone just
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doesn't cut it. Those still nourished by this antiquarian activity may argue
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that the ability to express oneself in words, and to understand the words of
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others, is essential to the process of thinking. But multimedia laughs at
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that objection - because multimedia, like its progenitor, television, is
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designed to entertain, at the cost of thinking.
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Let's look at a multimedia project geared to the education market: the
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ABC-TV products that utilise television news footage of important events,
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such as the presidential elections, or the Middle East crisis. Presumably the
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product's purpose is to amplify the failings of the written word. As Doug
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Doyle, Apple's manager of multimedia solutions for higher education, puts
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it, "Traditionally, we thought that information resides in the library - in
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books. But that's not true any more." Multimedia is a way to capture that
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information and, as Doyle says, "add value" to it by including it in the
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learning process.
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That seems to make some sense, but is the gain sufficient to
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overcome the danger that the images will overwhelm everything else? Take
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the ABC product dealing with the Middle East. Presumably, by interacting
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with a multilinked set of video clips loaded with key images and sound bites
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from the Holy Land, the student gets a deeper understanding of the situation.
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Actually, since the language of television is the main form of
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communication here, and the student is encouraged to browse the material
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by accessing a subject here and a subject there, a lack of context is almost
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guaranteed. Some of the clips are quite dramatic but lack a full explanation
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of the circumstances under which they were taped.
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In order to get full use of the system, each student needs to spend
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unhurried time with a Macintosh, a video monitor, and a laser disc player.
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(Apparently one advantage of multimedia over book learning is that the
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former generates significantly higher revenues.) Once installed before a
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machine, students are encouraged to create their own reports on the system.
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Drawing on the culture of TV babies, these reports are not driven by
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language or reasoning, but by the accumulation of vivid images. The students
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are literally asked to perform the function of a television news producer,
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splicing clips together for maximum impact. And clever students will soon
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learn, as clever television producers understand all to well, the facts of
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dealing in a visual medium: one dramatic image, even if misleading,
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communicates more effectively than an interesting idea without a
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compelling picture accompanying it. It's history by sound bite. Doug Doyle of
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Apple insists that responsible teachers will prevent this from happening,
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but in light of our national experience with television - which has
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trivialised literature to sitcoms and transformed our politicians into
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pitchmen - this seems rather optimistic.
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If Books Could Talk.
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Recently I spent a session with Marc Canter and John Scull, the two
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key executives of MacroMind. They guided me through an impressive tour of
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their newest version of Director, a program designed to enliven information,
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multimedia style. Canter was frank in admitting that, given the present
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state of computer power, the only way Director and other powerful
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multimedia tools can be implemented is in expensive machines with
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relatively hard-to-use applications. Even so, those who do this type of work
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anyway - art directors and advertising people and television graphics folks
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- will currently find a Macintosh to be a cost-effective tool. I see no
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problem at all with lowering the cost of tools to people already involved in
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this form of show business, and MacroMind is doing honourable work in this
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regard. Likewise I think that multimedia capabilities have real value when
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used in areas such as scientific visualisation.
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But Canter and Scull were both gushing about the not-too-distant day
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when our Macintoshes will be more powerful, and their software will be as
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simple to use as a Nintendo machine. At that time, they guess reasonably,
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multimedia will be as accessible to ordinary users as, say, word processing
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is to people today. That will be the day when multimedia will be utilised in
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many instances where previously, logical communication sufficed quite
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nicely - except for the fact that one had to be literate to participate. Marc
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Canter believes that ultimately, multimedia will make significant inroads
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in replacing the beleaguered holdouts of communication, those dinosaurs
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that refuse to yield to pictures and sound...you know, books.
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Earlier, Canter and I had been talking about my current book project.
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As with the previous ones, I proceed with my research on the assumption
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that any images I collect in addition to the the realms of written and spoken
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material I gather will be conveyed only by my language. The finished project
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will be a bound stack of pages consisting of words, accessed a page at a
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time. Canter is convinced this process will be improved upon. "Steve," he
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said, bursting with enthusiasm, "I really believe that ten years from now
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you won't be writing a book in that traditional way. In ten years, books won't
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be written only in text - they'll be done with sound and video and images,
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and people will access it by links, not start to finish."
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Multimedia fulfilled: a world where sensory input is king. Where
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writing is replaced by "authoring." Where the techniques of sneaker ads "add
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value" to charts and spreadsheets, and a thousand words die with every
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picture. Words we could have used. Words that bind a reader and a writer,
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words that bear rereading, words that when carefully unraveled detonate
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fireworks inside the mind and change lives.
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Canter couldn't have meant this, could he? Yet, he said it - within a
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decade, books are going multimedia.
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"What you don't understand, Mark," I said to him, "is that you're
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describing my nightmare."
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________________________________________________________________________
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Steven Levy is a Macworld columnist and author of "The Unicorn's Secret:
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Murder in the Age of Aquarius" (NAL, 1989).
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