This study presents a history of videotex and online services as seen through predictions and forecasts made at different stages. It presents the primarily optimistic expectations for what was then a 'new technology' created by merging the television, telephone, and the computer. In the USA, videotex is often perceived as a major market failure that should have been easy to foresee. However, success was constrained by the centralised-services architecture and applications of the time, and by undue belief in the revolutionary potential of the technology. A decentralised approach, both in technology and in applications, enabled the success of the World Wide Web - and proved many early predictors to be prescient about applications that would be popular on an interactive network.
[1]
Efrem Sigel,et al.
Videotext : the coming revolution in home/office information retrieval
,
1980
.
[2]
Leanna Skarnulis.
Is There an Electronic Byline in Your Future
,
1982
.
[3]
Michel Godet,et al.
Reducing the blunders in forecasting
,
1983
.
[4]
William Paisley.
Knowledge utilization: The role of new communication technologies
,
1993
.
[5]
Here Comes the Revolution-Again
,
1994
.
[6]
Donald Owen Case.
The Social Shaping of Videotex: How Information Services for the Public Have Evolved
,
1994,
J. Am. Soc. Inf. Sci..
[7]
Bruce C. Klopfenstein.
Forecasting consumer adoption of information technology and services - Lessons from home video forecasting
,
1989,
JASIS.