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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jonathan Coopersmith (Associate Professor of History, Texas A&M University)Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press Imprint: Johns Hopkins University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.476kg ISBN: 9781421421230ISBN 10: 1421421232 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 29 November 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsPreface Abbreviations Introduction 1. First Patent to First World War, 1843–1918 2. First Markets, 1918–1939 3. Facsimile, 1939–1965 4. The Sleeping Giant Stirs, 1965–1980 5. The Giant Awakes, 1980–1995 6. The Fax and the Computer Conclusion Notes Essay on Sources IndexReviewsCoopersmith provides an illuminating, meticulously researched and often fascinating account. Times Literary Supplement Archival research and interviews were used to reveal this lost history, while a tone designed to entertain as well as inform lends to a survey highly recommended for any interested in technological advancement and business history. Midwest Book Review Coopersmith tells his story clearly with ample attention both to technical detail and wider context, and notably with an eye to the comparative evolution of fax in different national contexts. It is highly recommended to readers. IEEE History Center Newsletter This book should be part of any history of technology collection. It also provides an interesting read for general audiences Choice [The] breadth of coverage alone makes Faxed an important contribution to the history of communications technologies, and provides a strong foundation for further work that digs deeper into particular time period, devices, or markets. IEEE Technology andd Society Magazine] ... Each invention deserves at least one good book, and Coppersmith has written the fax machine's definitive history here. Journal of American History Based on an immense body of material collected from archives across three continents, Faxed provides a model of transnational scholarship and represents a major addition to the histories of communication and information technology. Technology and Culture Juxtaposing the obvious and the obscure, the momentous and the mundane, Coopersmith leads us inside the black box of fax history, and we emerge with fresh perspectives of one technology whose time has passed but legacy remains. H-Net Reviews The most important lesson of Faxed is that the real history of technology is inherently messy, and the complicated history captured in this book-which can be admired through the 1,148 footnotes in the back matter-is testimony to that inescapable fact. If you wish to know anything about the history of fax technology, it is highly probable that you will find it in this encyclopedic treatment. Shashi: The Journal of Japanese Business anc Company History Coopersmith provides an illuminating, meticulously researched and often fascinating account. * Times Literary Supplement * Archival research and interviews were used to reveal this lost history, while a tone designed to entertain as well as inform lends to a survey highly recommended for any interested in technological advancement and business history. * Midwest Book Review * Coopersmith tells his story clearly with ample attention both to technical detail and wider context, and notably with an eye to the comparative evolution of fax in different national contexts. It is highly recommended to readers. * IEEE History Center Newsletter * This book should be part of any history of technology collection. It also provides an interesting read for general audiences. * Choice * [The] breadth of coverage alone makes Faxed an important contribution to the history of communications technologies, and provides a strong foundation for further work that digs deeper into particular time period, devices, or markets. * IEEE Technology andd Society Magazine] * ... Each invention deserves at least one good book, and Coppersmith has written the fax machine's definitive history here. * Journal of American History * Based on an immense body of material collected from archives across three continents, Faxed provides a model of transnational scholarship and represents a major addition to the histories of communication and information technology. * Technology and Culture * Juxtaposing the obvious and the obscure, the momentous and the mundane, Coopersmith leads us inside the black box of fax history, and we emerge with fresh perspectives of one technology whose time has passed but legacy remains. * H-Net Reviews * The most important lesson of Faxed is that the real history of technology is inherently messy, and the complicated history captured in this book-which can be admired through the 1,148 footnotes in the back matter-is testimony to that inescapable fact. If you wish to know anything about the history of fax technology, it is highly probable that you will find it in this encyclopedic treatment. * Shashi: The Journal of Japanese Business anc Company History * We are fortunate that the author took the time to complete this book, because our understanding of the history of faxing, and of the history of modern technology in general, is much richer for it. * The Pacific Circle * ... This work is meticulously researched and the information astutely synthesized. Those with a strong interest in the history of technology will be richly rewarded. * Library Journal * Coopersmith provides an illuminating, meticulously researched and often fascinating account. Times Literary Supplement Archival research and interviews were used to reveal this lost history, while a tone designed to entertain as well as inform lends to a survey highly recommended for any interested in technological advancement and business history. Midwest Book Review Coopersmith tells his story clearly with ample attention both to technical detail and wider context, and notably with an eye to the comparative evolution of fax in different national contexts. It is highly recommended to readers. IEEE History Center Newsletter This book should be part of any history of technology collection. It also provides an interesting read for general audiences. Choice [The] breadth of coverage alone makes Faxed an important contribution to the history of communications technologies, and provides a strong foundation for further work that digs deeper into particular time period, devices, or markets. IEEE Technology andd Society Magazine] ... Each invention deserves at least one good book, and Coppersmith has written the fax machine's definitive history here. Journal of American History Based on an immense body of material collected from archives across three continents, Faxed provides a model of transnational scholarship and represents a major addition to the histories of communication and information technology. Technology and Culture Juxtaposing the obvious and the obscure, the momentous and the mundane, Coopersmith leads us inside the black box of fax history, and we emerge with fresh perspectives of one technology whose time has passed but legacy remains. H-Net Reviews The most important lesson of Faxed is that the real history of technology is inherently messy, and the complicated history captured in this book-which can be admired through the 1,148 footnotes in the back matter-is testimony to that inescapable fact. If you wish to know anything about the history of fax technology, it is highly probable that you will find it in this encyclopedic treatment. Shashi: The Journal of Japanese Business anc Company History We are fortunate that the author took the time to complete this book, because our understanding of the history of faxing, and of the history of modern technology in general, is much richer for it. The Pacific Circle Coopersmith provides an illuminating, meticulously researched and often fascinating account. Times Literary Supplement Archival research and interviews were used to reveal this lost history, while a tone designed to entertain as well as inform lends to a survey highly recommended for any interested in technological advancement and business history. Midwest Book Review Coopersmith tells his story clearly with ample attention both to technical detail and wider context, and notably with an eye to the comparative evolution of fax in different national contexts. It is highly recommended to readers. IEEE History Center Newsletter This book should be part of any history of technology collection. It also provides an interesting read for general audiences Choice [The] breadth of coverage alone makes Faxed an important contribution to the history of communications technologies, and provides a strong foundation for further work that digs deeper into particular time period, devices, or markets. IEEE Technology andd Society Magazine] ... Each invention deserves at least one good book, and Coppersmith has written the fax machine's definitive history here. Journal of American History Based on an immense body of material collected from archives across three continents, Faxed provides a model of transnational scholarship and represents a major addition to the histories of communication and information technology. Technology and Culture Author InformationJonathan Coopersmith is a professor of history at Texas A&M University. He is the author of The Electrification of Russia, 1880-1926 and the history of technology blog Infinity, Limited. 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