Information and communications technology
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

Loisirs Littéraires au XXe siècle (English: "Literary leasures in the 20th century") is the title of an illustration from the story "The End of Books" by French writer Octave Uzanne and illustrator Albert Robida, a story about a post-literate society in which readers have become 'hearers', consumers of audio books. It was published in the collection Contes pour les bibliophiles (1895). The illustration depicts a female reader of the 20th century, imagined by Robida, who is listening to "12 poètes assortis" (twelve assorted poets) in on the balcony overlooking a future city.
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Information and communication technology (ICT) is another/extensional term for information technology (IT) that stresses the role of unified communications and the integration of telecommunications (telephone lines and wireless signals), computers as well as necessary enterprise software, middleware, storage, and audio-visual systems, which enable users to access, store, transmit, and manipulate information.
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See also
- Cloud computing
- Cognitive infocommunications
- DICOM
- Digital divide
- Example of Information and communication technologies for education
- Global e-Schools and Communities Initiative
- Hospital information system
- Infocommunications
- Information Age
- Information and communication technologies for environmental sustainability
- Market information systems
- Mobile Web
- Picture archiving and communication system
- 21st century skills
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