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Explore the evolution of unions in relation to computer communication from 1950 to 2020, and the potential effects on workplace dynamics, education, and predicting technologies. Discover how unions can adapt to the New Electronic Society through innovative solutions designed for group work.
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Computers in Society • 1950: 2 computers • 2003: millions • 2020: billions
Computer Communication Tendencies • Decentralization • Customization • Linkages made fragile and temporary • Hardware translated to software • everything is connected • A new biological metaphor
Computer Communication Effects • De-industrialization • Globalization • Virtual Companies • Dynamic Employer-Worker Arrangements • Contracting-out
Computer Communication Effects • Workplace • Education
Computer Communication Effects • The Imaginary Workplace A workplace of unlimited resources based on creativity which can produce full employment and is predicated on democracy in the workplace.
Computer Communication Effects • Education in the Imaginary Workplace • workers become L’earners • life-long training and education • computer-based distance education • more private educational activity than public
Predicting Technologies • Entertainment and toy industry • Corporate existence • Democratic communities • The Internet • Linux
Predicting Technologies • A period of rapid change • The ‘90s Gold Rush • Fast change means societies are easily deflected • Same arguments for laissez-faire capitalism • We have to learn how to confront change
Predicting Technologies • The technologies which exists today are hazy prototypes of what will appear tomorrow.
Speaking of the “Internet” in 2003 is like speaking about the “Electricity” in 1903.
The Internet • The Internet is an enabling, multi-purpose technology. • This means many more technologies are headed our way.
The Internet • The book enabled: • Literacy • Grammar • The Reformation • National borders • Capital markets • The Industrial Revolution • Unions
The Internet • Electricity spawned: • Telegraph • Light bulb • Telephone • Movies • Radio • TV
Will unions be part of this New Electronic Society?Yes. If they participate in the design of new technologies.
The Internet CourseReader • An educational computer communications program • Designed by unionists for group work • Helps solves problems due to: • High Internet costs • Undependable electricity • Expensive telephone connections
The Internet CourseReader Internet
The Internet CourseReader Internet
The Internet CourseReader Internet
The Internet CourseReader Internet
The Internet CourseReader Internet
The Internet CourseReader Internet
The Internet CourseReader • Developed as “Open Source” Software • Free of charge • “Source Code” available for programmers • Translatable • Freely distributable • Foundation of an international union-owned, union-designed educational computer communications network
Union Web Sites Internet
Union Web Sites Internet
Union Web Sites • Web Page Creation Software • Mozilla • Open source “free” software • Available in: Belarusion, Bulgarian, Czech, Estonian, Hungarian, Polish, Romanian, Russian, Sorbian, Slovak, Slovenian, and Ukranian.