Buy new:
-8% $23.96$23.96
FREE delivery January 8 - 15
Ships from: Libup Books! Sold by: Libup Books!
Save with Used - Like New
$7.28$7.28
FREE delivery January 8 - 13
Ships from: ThriftBooks-Phoenix Sold by: ThriftBooks-Phoenix
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Follow the author
OK
The Unfinished Revolution: Human-Centered Computers and What They Can Do For Us Hardcover – January 1, 2001
Purchase options and add-ons
If our cars were as difficult to drive as our computers are to operate, they would never leave the garage. Yet everyday we put up with infuriating complications and incomprehensible error messages that spew forth from our technology: software upgrades crash our machines, Web sites take forever to download, e-mail overwhelms us. We spend endless time on the phone waiting for automated assistance.
In effect, we continue to serve our machines' lowly needs, instead of insisting that they serve us -- a situation that will only get worse as millions of new mobile devices arrive on the scene.
Our world doesn't have to be this way. It shouldn't be this way.
Wouldn't it be great if using your computer was as effortless as steering your car? In The Unfinished Revolution, Michael Dertouzos introduces human-centered computing a radical change in the way we fashion and use computer systems that will ultimately make this goal possible.
The Unfinished Revolution is nothing less than an inspired manifesto for the future of computing. Dertouzos's vision will change how businesses, organizations, and governments work with each other, and how individuals interact. It represents the dawn of a new era in information technology.
Human-centered computing goes well beyond the empty promises of "user-friendly" interfaces. At its foundation are five key technologies that will dramatically amplify our human capabilities: natural interaction, automation, individualized information access, collaboration, and customization. Human-centered systems will understand us when we speak to them; will do much of our routine brainwork for us; will get us the information we want, when and where we want it; will help us work with other people across space and time; and will adapt on their own to our individual needs and desires.
By exploiting these five emerging technologies in combination -- in our professional specialties and in our personal lives -- we will see a vast increase in our productivity and a marked change in the ways we live and work. Human-centered technologies will make computers simpler, more natural, and more useful to us. The collective benefits of human-centered machines will give ordinary people capabilities that go beyond those enjoyed today by the most privileged. Human-centered systems will give us the gaspedal, brakes, and steering wheel of the Information Age.
When can all this happen? Dertouzos says the time to start is now. You can begin simplifying and improving your relationship with computers today. Dertouzos offers dozens of scenarios that illustrate the potential of human centered computing, as well as a preview of the MIT Oxygen project -- a prototype now under development that aims to make pervasive human-centered computing a reality. Dertouzos also provides the new century's first glimpse of how upcoming information technology advances will significantly improve our lives and truly revolutionize our relationships with the computer.
This is a book for everyone, professionals and nonspecialists, who yearn for machines that live up to the grand promise of the Information Revolution -- fulfilling real human needs with greater simplicity -- that still lingers unfulfilled. The Unfinished Revlolution is for those who want to enhance their computer productivity and fun, in short, for every person who wants to do more by doing less.
- Print length225 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarper Business
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 2001
- Dimensions6.12 x 0.91 x 9.25 inches
- ISBN-100066620678
- ISBN-13978-0066620671
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Customer reviews
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star5 star67%10%23%0%0%67%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star4 star67%10%23%0%0%10%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star3 star67%10%23%0%0%23%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star2 star67%10%23%0%0%0%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star1 star67%10%23%0%0%0%
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonTop reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2014Loved the deep thought, articulations and the holistic vision laid out. I see the evolution of the human centric computing right in front of eyes along with the promise of machine learning and biocomputing being fulfilled earlier than prophecised. Appealed to the very core of my belief and what i believe is the amalgamated path that we need to while firing on all the 4 cyclinders of humanity.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 2, 2001After reading Mr. Dertouzos book which mainly introduces MIT's "Oxygen" project, I am more convinced than before that software design is headed for disaster. "Human-centric" computing turns out to be not much more than "user-friendly" computing in a new disguise: in addition to graphical symbols and buttons we will also get speech recognition and "red links". We will pay for this with much more "ugly" complexity and size of software. The ugliness, Mr. Dertouzos comforts us, will, however, not be visible to the user... Computer science and industry currently belief that "tag-mania" is the cure-all for the fundamental flaws of software. These flaws are rooted in the logic architecture of software, which they do no want or are not able to change or improve. Instead we are being offered tags for everything, and eventually tags of tags... The resulting mess of ever more complex and bloated software is left to Mr. Moore and the chip-designers who have to come up with ever faster and more complex chips, until not only California runs out of voltage... My suspicion is that academia today is not really interested in research for fundamental innovation (like a better logic architecture for computing), but in "Delta - X" research, developing band-aids and pain-killers for the mess that keeps building up on their own crumbling foundations. This book is a good illustration of the state of IT: the patient is in intensive care, his limbs and organs replaced, kept barely alive by massive technologies, while the doctor, calling in even more technology, tells the patient's family: `He will be as good as new, even better...' This situation will only change when we get a fundamentally new approach that allows direct association of all data as well as next higher order processes without running into size or complexity problems. It can be done.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2015Excellent read! Even tho the book has some years on it the essence is still super relevant. This is a must read for anyone that's interested or is exploring how tech will make our life better, from the perspective of utility and not technology.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2001Although this book was written for both people who use computers and for the technologists who use them, the latter are the primary audience. General computer users will find their normal complaints about bulky, balky technology recognized here, but will get little but emotional support for near-term improvements. The primary benefit of the book comes in the many scenarios of interactions with information technology to simplify, speed, ease, and improve the processing to better serve the user's needs.
Dr. Dertouzos is always on the cutting edge of the information revolution in his role as the head of MIT's Computer Laboratory. The core of this book is captured in chapter 8, where MIT's new Oxygen project is described. This is a prototype of "human-centered" information technology. The system combines a portable device for wireless communication, a stationary system built into a room (with transportable software from the portable device to the stationary system), and a network to support the interactions of users to the technology in new ways.
The strongest part of the book is in complaints about the limitations of current information devices and networks. These will be familiar to any computer user, but it is refreshing to hear them from someone involved in drawing the outlines of the future. These include bulky software that does too much (like the word processing program most of us use that keeps automatically reformating what you have typed into something you don't want), weak interfaces between multiple programs and products so they crash when combined, the need to type so much information in, lousy search engines that waste your time, horrible telephone robots for getting to the right number, difficulties in sharing information, and the burdens of unwanted and unneeded e-mail.
His solutions focus on five areas: Letting people converse with information devices in ways similar to how you would speak with a service person in a business; using e-forms to capture your information once and to then automate the sharing of that information with organizations who legitimately need it; finding answers by building on information that others have learned whom you trust; changing the method of distance working and learning so that the interactions are made more realistic and better summarized; and allowing you to tap into personalized, custom software preferences wherever you are and with whatever device you are using.
Each area contains several examples of how these changes might work, many drawn from actual Oxygen applications that are now operating. So you should think of this book as focusing on what will be technically feasible in the next five years or so.
I hope that Dr. Dertouzos will write a sequel to this book that looks further ahead than that in order to begin to spell out an even more improved version of information processing. As much as I was attracted to his vision here, I found that it mainly focused on enhancing the ways that I do things now. I thought that more could be done to help individuals operate in new ways that would vastly enhance human progress. Problem-solving software designed to help structure issues, gather information, analyze it, get feedback from others on the process, and compare to the potential for perfection could be one such example.
Seeing this book also made me realize that much more work of this sort is needed. Without detailed scenarios of how to create solutions that people really want, technologists will continue to provide user unfriendly technology. I suspect that we need a vast experimental activity where people attempt to find new ways to get benefits from technology while removing its hindrances.
Those who read about "human-centered" technology will, of course, want to know what the catch is. You will find towards the end of the book that Dr. Dertouzos points out that making the humans a little more standard in their interactions would allow the information technology to work better. So the vision is still a little along the lines of making each of us fit into the round hole in the technology board. With more technology advances, I hope that aspect will quickly disappear. It certainly should be a primary objective.
After you finish reading this book, I suggest that you create your own scenario for a better way to get a task done with information technology. Then send it along to Dr. Dertouzos, so he can share it with others. In that way, you can help speed the unfinished revolution talked about in this book.
Let's focus on making vast improvements in human benefits, net of human frustration and stress, in all of our technologies rather than focusing on selling products to other technologists! That's the real mindframe shift that is needed!
Top reviews from other countries
Ms T M BrothwellReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 1, 20155.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
A brilliant read


