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The Message is the Medium
Online, All the Time, for Everyone:
The Message is the Medium
A book about why people go online and what they find
there

What is online and how electronic resources
are being used today by average, normal people. First and foremost, it argues, the medium
is not the message. From the perspective of the user, it is the message which is critical.
If you're ill and need a new medication, do you care if notice of a new drug's power comes
to you by telephone, in the newspaper, through the medical journals, or by tom-tom? Of
course not. What is important is the data itself, and the hope that it brings. This book
begins with the assumption that all online resources, including the Internet, need to be
understood from the perspective of the user in his or her search for answers to the
questions that affect their lives.
This perspective leads to a radical
redefinition of online resources, and a new approach to understanding the
"Information Highway." It is not another "how-to" guide, although it
contains both practical and instructional data. Rather, it offers a general tutorial
explaining the system-at-large from the perspective of the user, and the data he or she
needs to resolve problems and crises. It thus provides a simple, powerful, and unique
explanation of these resources as a whole: what they are and what they do for the
individual. All chapters are illustrated with examples.
Included are chapters on the Internet, search
methodologies, data evaluation, commercial services (for example, CompuServe) and use of
all resources for medical research, ethical decision making, eldercare, use by children,
sexuality online, financial planning, and other issues.
The book's common sense perspective
advances a unique and contrarian position:
The message is the medium. What drives
online expansion is its content, the ability to message with enormous specificity and
directness to people, groups, and digital library resources. Popular acceptance of these
technologies is driven not by the medium's attraction, but by the quality and content of
data it allows users to send and receive.
The Internet is not the Information Highway,
any more than New England is the United States. The Internet is a region of online
services, a confederation of UseNet, academic resources, mail services, etc.
Data is not information. The online
universe contains little information. What is available is data from which information can
be constructed. At best, the whole can be thought of as a "databahn," linking
potential sources, not a road to certainty.
Online access is not revolutionary, but
evolutionary. It grows from a cultural and technologic history. It is the end point of
years of change. This means that in learning to use these tools we can build on what is
known, rather than attempting to learn something entirely new.
The evolution is technical. The
personal computer joins older technologies in a way which is intuitive and comprehensible.
Digital systems combine the immediacy of the telephone, the permanence and specificity of
written mail, and the richness of old fashioned libraries.
The evolution is cultural. Digital data
storage is the end point in a long, history which began with the printing revolution of
the 18th century. From then until now, the goal has been to provide normal people with
ever better data. This has meant decreasing, at each stage, the mediation of expert
"gatekeepers" and inexpert officials. Thus the online evolution speaks to the
historical struggle by normal people for ever greater public access to unbiased and
unmediated data.
Order Information
Available from Praeger Books, a division of Greenwood
Publishing Group
Ordered through bookstores, or directly from the publisher (1-800-225-5800).

To purchase online, search for Tom Koch on
Amazon.com

© TOM KOCH 1996-2006
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