It’s increasingly difficult to keep up with the rapid growth of new forms of communication created by the Internet. Change happens so fast that even a relatively new format—such as Wikipedia, launched in 2001—seems old and familiar just ten years later. Paul Levinson, an author and professor of communication and media studies at Fordham University, says one characteristic that distinguishes “new new media” from simple “new media” is that in the newer form the consumer is also a producer
Media and communications are changing rapidly and their transformation is having a momentous impact ...
The digitalisation of the media implies a multi-aspectual approach, which, in a general framework, a...
Digital networks shape traditional actors (authors, readers, librarians, publishers, and other inter...
The main objective of Producing the Internet: Critical Perspectives of Social Media is to analyse th...
The world of communication media has undergone massive changes since the mid-1980s. Along with the e...
Over 6,000 years of literary civilisation, there have been perhaps 300 million authors: people capab...
This is the fourth edition of New Media: An Introduction, with the previous editions being published...
The world of communication media has undergone massive changes since the mid-1980s. Along with the e...
Paul Saffo of the Institute for the Future (Kluth 2006) described what's going on right now as a "Ca...
In his 1987 book, The Media Lab: Inventing the Future at MIT, Stewart Brand provides an insight into...
According to conventional wisdom we frequently hear that “new media” and new technologies are revolu...
The digital era we are in is presenting a series of innovations every day. Today, technology is beco...
Journalism with a Future studies the changes provoked by the digital revolution in communication and...
Technology has changed virtually every aspect of communication. As more of us adapt to news and info...
In News on the Internet: Information and Citizenship in the 21st Century, David Tewksbury and Jason ...
Media and communications are changing rapidly and their transformation is having a momentous impact ...
The digitalisation of the media implies a multi-aspectual approach, which, in a general framework, a...
Digital networks shape traditional actors (authors, readers, librarians, publishers, and other inter...
The main objective of Producing the Internet: Critical Perspectives of Social Media is to analyse th...
The world of communication media has undergone massive changes since the mid-1980s. Along with the e...
Over 6,000 years of literary civilisation, there have been perhaps 300 million authors: people capab...
This is the fourth edition of New Media: An Introduction, with the previous editions being published...
The world of communication media has undergone massive changes since the mid-1980s. Along with the e...
Paul Saffo of the Institute for the Future (Kluth 2006) described what's going on right now as a "Ca...
In his 1987 book, The Media Lab: Inventing the Future at MIT, Stewart Brand provides an insight into...
According to conventional wisdom we frequently hear that “new media” and new technologies are revolu...
The digital era we are in is presenting a series of innovations every day. Today, technology is beco...
Journalism with a Future studies the changes provoked by the digital revolution in communication and...
Technology has changed virtually every aspect of communication. As more of us adapt to news and info...
In News on the Internet: Information and Citizenship in the 21st Century, David Tewksbury and Jason ...
Media and communications are changing rapidly and their transformation is having a momentous impact ...
The digitalisation of the media implies a multi-aspectual approach, which, in a general framework, a...
Digital networks shape traditional actors (authors, readers, librarians, publishers, and other inter...