| Linstone, H.A. and Sahal, D., Ed. (1976). Technological Substitution: Forecasting Techniques and Applications. New York, Elsevier. |
....development; for example, programming has led to a software industry, humancomputer interaction has led to an interactive applications industry, document representation has led to a desktop publishing industry, and so on. Each of these emergent areas of computing has had its own learning curve (Linstone and Sahal, 1976), and the growth of information systems technology overall may be seen as the cumulative impact of a tiered succession of learning curves, each triggered by advances at lower levels and each supporting further advances at lower levels and the eventual triggering of new advances at higher levels ....
Linstone, H.A. and Sahal, D., Ed. (1976). Technological Substitution: Forecasting Techniques and Applications. New York, Elsevier.
....development. For example, programming has led to a software industry, human computer interaction has led to an interactive applications industry, document representation has led to a desktop publishing industry, and so on. Each of these emergent areas of computing has had its own learning curve (Linstone and Sahal, 1976), and the growth of information systems technology overall may be seen as the cumulative impact of a tiered succession of learning curves. Each curve is triggered by advances at lower levels, and each supports further advances at lower levels and the eventual triggering of new advances at higher ....
Linstone, H.A. and Sahal, D., Ed. (1976). Technological Substitution: Forecasting Techniques and Applications. New York, Elsevier.
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