City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

Dawn of the new everything, a journey through virtual reality, Jaron Lanier

Label
Dawn of the new everything, a journey through virtual reality, Jaron Lanier
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Dawn of the new everything
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionariesbibliography
Responsibility statement
Jaron Lanier
Sub title
a journey through virtual reality
Summary
Named a Best Book of the Year by the Economist, Wall Street Journal & Vox`The father of virtual reality' (Sunday Times) explains why virtual reality presents the ultimate test for humanity.`Essential reading, not just for VR-watchers but for anyone interested in how society came to be how it is, and what it might yet become' EconomistWelcome to a mind-expanding, life-enhancing, world-changing adventure.Virtual reality has long been one of the dominant clichs of science fiction. Now virtual reality is a reality: from the startling beauty of lifelike video games to the place where war veterans overcome PTSD, surgeries are trialled, and aircraft and cities are designed. VR is, in fact now, the most effective device ever invented for researching what a human being actually is - and how we think and feel. More than thirty years ago, legendary computer scientist, visionary and artist Jaron Lanier pioneered its invention. Here he blends scientific investigation, philosophical thought experiment and his memoir of a life lived at the centre of digital innovation to explain what VR really is: the science of comprehensive illusion; the extension of the intimate magic of earliest childhood into adulthood; a hint of what life would be like without any limits. We are standing on the threshold of an entirely new realm of human creativity, expression, communication and experience, and as we use VR to test our relationship with reality, it may test us in return.`Vivid and absolutely extraordinary' Evening Standard