Computing Skills and the User Interface
Computing Skills and the User Interface
The myth of the awesome thinking machine
Communications of the ACM - Special issue on graphical user interfaces
CSC '87 Proceedings of the 15th annual conference on Computer Science
The use of menus in the design of on-line sytems: a retrospective view
ACM SIGCHI Bulletin
Attitudes of entry-level University students towards computers: a comparitive study
Computers & Education
An investigation of marketing managers' dissatisfaction with marketing information systems
International Journal of Information Management: The Journal for Information Professionals
Information Resources Management Journal
Hi-index | 48.22 |
What do people really think about computers and their impact? In 1970, a study of people's attitudes in North America showed computers to be regarded as either “beneficial tools of mankind” or as “awesome thinking machines.” A recent survey taken in Australia and reported in this article, though, suggests there may have been a change in attitudes over the past decade. The Australians expressed much concern over the computer's possible disemploying and dehumanizing effects—as well as disquiet over the control computers could exercise over their lives. If these attitudes are typical beyond the shores of Australia, they could create a barrier to the widespread acceptance and application of computers around the world.