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"The word "wireless" was once common in Britain for describing radio, but in the 21st century it has acquired new meaning for all sorts of electronic transmissions. The old world of heavy cords linking a telephone to a wall and a network of lines stretched across poles up and down the highway was the reality that Orwell knew, but he could also see the emergence of a world full of voices traveling everywhere wirelessly in a virtual reality where hard facts and great ideas might matter less and less. There would be more talk but less substance."
Professor Michael Shelden

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"The word "wireless" was once common in Britain for describing radio, but in the 21st century it has acquired new meaning for all sorts of electronic transmissions. The old world of heavy cords linking a telephone to a wall and a network of lines stretched across poles up and down the highway was the reality that Orwell knew, but he could also see the emergence of a world full of voices traveling everywhere wirelessly in a virtual reality where hard facts and great ideas might matter less and less. There would be more talk but less substance."

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