Sunday, November 1, 2009

HW 16- Big Paper 1 Outline

Thesis:Digital technology gave us the means to control how connected or disconnected from the physical world we were. It put us more in command of our lives than we ever were before, but also created a far greater opportunity to lose that control as a result.

Example #1: EBiGFY. In the long excerpt, the author discussed how use of certain digital devices, such as video games, the Internet and television can be very effective in certain areas of neural-development. The thing which he doesn't really touch on is that overuse, can lead to an apathetic state that can make a person develop, but not have any drive or ambition to apply that development in the real world. The danger in overuse lies in the failure to see how you develop and become attached to the device itself. An example is television. A person who watches a show like Man Vs. Wild to learn survival skills and learn a thing or two about nature, may want to eventually go to say... Australia and tour the outback. But assuming that like most people, the person cannot afford a trip to Australia, they probably wont go, but they will however try and learn as much as they can about the outback if they are so inclined. On the other end of the programming spectrum, you have shows like I Love New York. Now supposedly, if I follow the authors logic, this show has a socially educational effect on the viewer. But look at why the person watches that show, and i almost guarantee that they will not start discussing the complex relationship between New York and the contestants, or the process which New York uses to eliminate contestants. We have command of our ability to learn and pick up very useful knowledge through everything from Man Vs. Wild, to I Love New York, but if we ignore it and just submit to watching countless hours of T.V, than we learn nothing and all that viewing has exactly no mental benefit.


Example #2: Feed. M.T. Anderson's novel "Feed" is an allegory about our modern society, highlighting the problems with today's American consumer culture, and our lack of concern for the world beyond ourselves. The Feed, is a sort of iPhone built into your head, which allows users instant gratification, and the digital world is prevalent over the physical one. The idea of the evil corporation is hidden underneath the story, but nonetheless it is a very important layer of the story. The company that owns and operates the Feed, has the sole purpose of advertising and creating consumers, while allowing users to access information, that is, if they want to. Any real information or conversation about real issues is intentionally absent from most of the book. This is a sort of acknowledgment to the lack of useful things being done with the Internet because of the choice we have to not use the Internet for intelligent things. The "Feed Corporation" obviously only wants to make money, as do corporations in real life. As a result, the Feed doesn't promote anything other than buying and buying and buying.

In the real world, we have the same problem. We have this great new technology that can be used to advance ourselves and improve our minds, but this new technology also happens to be a great marketing platform. What that does, is create a system that tries to steer us away from information, but towards products and direct the majority of the technology towards making people think they need stuff that they sometimes don't even want. The Internet can be used for just about anything and everything. The key to regulating your use, and maintaining control of your life online, is to maintain your focus; Keep in mind why you went online, do what you intended, and than log off. The problems arise when we are "bored" and instead of reading or drawing or spending time with our family, we go on YouTube and watch car crashes, or animals doing funny shit. I think that Internet use isn't about staying away from fresh direct.com, or YouTube.com or facebook.com. If you come online trying to shop for food, than by all means, go to fresh direct. If you want to talk to one of your friends, than don't hesitate to go onto facebook. What you shouldn't do, is go onto the Internet and just explore. The Internet is massive, so if you just keep looking around, you will never see a fraction of it, and besides most of it isn't worth seeing anyway.

An example of the idea I proposed above is something that I used to do when I was younger. When I was hungry, I used to go into my kitchen and just basically open the fridge and the freezer, and look for what I might want. It didn't matter how many times a day I did that, I always looked around like something new might show up. My point is, that this is alot like how we surf the web. We sit in front of our computers with the browser open, looking to find something new, even if we knew that what we had been looking for initially wasn't even their. We really don't care, our only concern when we are online is to find something, anything, no matter how unimportant or dumb it may be.


Example #3: Self Experiment/ Informal Research/Interviews & Surveys. The topic of digitization I have come to realize, is a very easy one to over analyze. The fact is, some people just don't actually care all that much about this. I want to make a distinction here, between not caring and not realizing. Using my self experiment as an example, I concluded that I didn't really use a ridiculous amount of digital devices to begin with, but at the same time, I couldn't really bring myself to eliminate them completely for even one day in my life. I realized that I was not able to cut out these devices from my daily routine, but it was the fact that I didn't care which is why I feel like it wasn't such a bad thing that I wasn't able to. If you put it into perspective, the Internet has become a necessity in our society . The thing is, we are "able" to not use the Internet, but the demands of our world call for the service that it provides. We "need" the ability to access data quickly in our educational lives, personal lives, and professional lives, because it is available, we are expected to use it. The fact is, research on the Internet is much more efficient than research through books or periodicals.

When I did my "Informal Research Post", I researched "cloud networks". Cloud is the term used to describe the non-physical links between computers and information which collects in a database know as a cloud. What it is, is essentially a server which is owned by a company "subletting" space to paying companies who want to avoid the costs of maintaining their own server network. When I did this research, I looked at the definition, the uses and what companies own notable cloud networks. After that, I looked into the use of clouds in the medical field. I found that medical records are being moved to a cloud network owned by a company recently purchased by Dell, in order to eliminate the competition to get the contract to be the main operator of the new systems. Using the Internet, this took me only about an hour or two. If I wanted to, I could have used the library, looked through articles discussing the medical cloud networks, looked at books talking about Internet business, and most likely been able to find the same stuff. That being said, all that would have taken me many hours, and probably over the span of a few days at least.

I want to use that concept as evidence for what can be done if we use the Internet to discover, and focus on one topic to learn something through the technology. By focusing and not being sidetracked, the possibility of using the Internet as a super-efficient research tool is completely possible. At the same time, the lack of physical effort required to research online as opposed to at a library is a key factor in assessing how driven we are to apply ourselves. Taking that in to consideration raises the question of, whether or not online research is just lazy, or if it has real merit. I think that it does, because lazy is being assigned to research something, and ending up on YouTube watching Kanye's VMA speech.

Lastly, I want to quickly talk about my interviews and surveys which we did at the beginning of the unit. When asking people on the street about digitization, most people didn't respond, but for the most part I recognized by their facial expressions, that they were hearing what I was saying and thinking about the question. The fact was, most of those people didn't realize basic stuff about the world they spend most of their daily lives in. The few people who stopped and talked to me, gave pretty generic answers, but each talked about something insightful or unique at some point. These people, really didn't seem to care, they were thinking about it, but none of them really said anything about how they wanted to change their behavior, or what they felt was wrong with the digital world. The phrase "most people" was tossed around in a very defensive way, used to take the focus away from themselves and re asses the problem on a national or global scale. After those interviews, I interviewed my brother Max. Max I realized might not have been the best person to interview for 2 reasons. First, he is a pretty active kid, who has always been social in real life, so as a result is very social online. Second, he is not really analytical and didn't actually offer me much in the way of deep personal insight. On an ironic note, he did ask me to stop interviewing him so he could go play Xbox. That above all stuck in my head as an example of digital humor. Max just didn't care, he knew he used facebook, ichat, and played xbox, but he still played baseball, skateboarded, biked, and went to school, so really this idea of the "digital world" just didn't phase him.

In conclusion, I want to say that all this new technology is highly addictive. It appeals to our personalities on a sensory level, that we hear (ipods), feel (touch screens, Nintendo Wii), see (everything), and can emotionally connect to. This new breed of technology is dangerous if we don't try and regulate it. Their is a degree to which technology can replace things, and a degree to which technology improves things. The Internet is much to vast and has to many alternatives to physical "real world" processes to be safely heralded as a replacement. Is the Internet the new library? The new supermarket? The new forum for discussion? It might be, but do you want to have a food factory, that ships out food like mail? Do you want to replace the libraries with wikipedia? I don't, that may be easier, but it just takes the feeling out of living. You go to the supermarket and the library, that in of itself is an experience, we can't simulate that, no matter how advanced we get. People addicted to living conveniently are the reason for Wall-Mart, Mall of America and the disappearance of small businesses. This is just another drug, another way to get our "convenience fix". Living in the real world is something I really like, I don't want the physical world to go the way of the video store after netflix, because after that, what do we have left?

2 comments:

  1. I can tell you've gotten a good start on your paper already and its coming along nicely. I liked your idea about how people should try to learn from everything but they choose only to learn from digital media or anything that's entertaining. I'd like you to connect that to your thesis some how, maybe controlling how we learn can give us control over our lives, but limiting what we learn can make us loose control, opting to learn from GTA will make impressionable kids lose control because their ethics will be skewed. Great start though, I can tell you have a lot of ideas to get out and I'm looking forward to reading them.

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