{"content":{"sharePage":{"page":0,"digests":[{"id":"72047168","dateCreated":"1423760143","smartDate":"Feb 12, 2015","userCreated":{"username":"tardycannon","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/tardycannon","imageUrl":"https:\/\/ssl.wikicdn.com\/i\/user_none_lg.jpg"},"monitored":false,"locked":false,"links":{"self":"https:\/\/ccs395.wikispaces.com\/share\/view\/72047168"},"dateDigested":1532726006,"startDate":null,"sharedType":"discussion","title":"Professor's comments","description":" One way to proceed to investigate the difficult issue of obsolescence is through by studying history. What other media practices and technologies have obsolesced? It's important to know that when something becomes obsolescent, it usually doesn't 'disappear' but merges and into a newer media and\/or technological form. This is referred to as 'remediation'. One might further proceed to explore this question with respect to radio, which was a dominant media practice in the 20s to 40s, but was obsolesced by television. Yet radio is still very much alive today. How did this work exactly?","replyPages":[{"page":0,"digests":[],"more":0}]}],"more":false},"comments":[]},"http":{"code":200,"status":"OK"},"redirectUrl":null,"javascript":null,"notices":{"warning":[],"error":[],"info":[],"success":[]}}