Videotex
In Japan and Europe, government-operated videotex systems—among them Captain in Japan, Prestel in Britain, Bildschirmtext in Germany, and Minitel in France—are well established. In North America, systems have been developed by newspaper publishers (called electronic news) and banks. With the growing popularity of the personal computer, particularly in the United States, database services—called on-line systems or interactive services—are becoming more significant. These make the home user part of an interactive network and provide electronic mail and bulletin board facilities in addition to traditional videotex services. On-line systems also serve as gateways to the Internet, giving the user access to facilities worldwide. A growing trend, primarily in the United States and Canada but also in New Zealand and Finland, is the public computer system, modeled after public radio and public television systems. The first publicly supported computer system was the Heartland Freenet in Peoria, Ill.; by the mid 1990s more than two dozen other cities had free computer utilities containing community-oriented information and operated by universities or local governments.
See A. F. Alber, Videotex/Teletext: Principles and Practices (1985); P. L. Mothersole and N. W. White, Broadcast Data Systems (1990); A. F. Alber, Interactive Computer Systems: Videotex and Multimedia (1993).

