This book focuses on the notion of "vintage innovation" and its
application in various old technology-based communities of practice.
Some communities of practice resist and react to technological change by
adopting new technological products ("vintage products") that extend the
lifetime of their old, favored products and practices. There are a
number of potential reasons for such strategic reactions, which are
analyzed by the author. The book opens by reviewing the nature of
technological change. Old technology-based communities of practice and
their typical reactions to technological change are then discussed, and
the concept of vintage innovation, introduced and explained. The book
presents four case studies of communities of users in which vintage
innovation emerged: analog photographers, radio amateurs, arcade
videogame players, and disc jockeys.