


Over the course of the late 1990s and early 2000s, however, the concept of "post-TV" that had served to designate the expected outcome of the digital revolution would become increasingly framed as emblematic of the format's demise. Still, Shneiderman merits recognition as an early voice that looked to a future when television would no longer function as it did in his time. (1) He may not have been predicting the death of television per se but rather the evolution of audiovisual media from traditional broadcast TV to what would become known as digital media.

computers and communications" will facilitate pedagogical innovation. In an essay dating from 1993, educational computing specialist Ben Shneiderman anticipated the death of television in his discussion of educational resources and strategies in the post-TV era, when the "post-TV media.
