Off the Record is a novel and exciting look at the relationship of technology and culture in an area which touches our everyday lives. - Andre Millard (History Department, University of Alabama, Birmingham) The most fascinating aspect of Off the Record involves tracing the complex paths by which devices that are now commonplace originally came into being, gained markets, and slowly evolved. Each chapter is filled with brave hopes, false starts, mistaken social assumptions, and solutions that were almost, but not quite, right. Morton does a fine job of demonstrating multiple contingencies in the by-no-means-certain evolution of now-familiar technologies. - Jeffrey L. Meikle (American Studies, University of Texas at Austin)