Okay, so I feel like I should start by describing how I feel about the book "the medium is the Massage" in general.
I have never seen nor have read anything like it before in my life and I can't seem to make up my mind whether I like it or find it annoying. I did enjoy it being a short read however, and all the vast pictures spread throughout its pages were amusing - but I still just don't know.
That being said... When I read the sentence "all media work us over completely" for the first time, I immediately thought of the gym and how instead of physically working out our bodies and muscles, the internet and all media seem to do the same thing only with our minds: working our senses and how we perceive the world around us.
Media changed the way people communicated, educated, & entertained each other. Instead of written notes and telephone calls, we now have tweets and instant messaging. Everything is fast-paced.
Whenever I go back and watch an old movie or talk to my parents about the first time they saw color on the television they talk about it in a way that is almost "epic". Today, new technology comes out everyday, ceasing the excitement due to the grandeur scale of new releases. People don't really see the big difference in it all, there's just too much.
"All media work us over completely" ---- Media is everywhere!
Even if someone wanted to get away from it all, it'd be a much difficult task then you think. When I read the statement again, I think about how media work us over because we are constantly using some form of it or are surrounded by it. Cellphone, computer, iPad, iPhone, television, even the radio.
For an experiment I think it would be interesting if you asked everyone to put their cell phones on the front desk in class. Visible to us, so we know its not in danger, but far away enough where we are on edge. I can bet we all act a little differently for the hour and fifteen minutes because of it.
Because yes, "all media work us over completely" -- Every sense of us.
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Sunday, January 26, 2014
A Little Of Both...
Every age group in the world today is succumbed to using the Internet.
Whether it be on mainstream computers, handheld cell phones, iPads, or even car monitors, the possibilities of outreaching knowledge & communication through the net is immeasurable. The thought of whether its presence in society is potent enough for future generations to keep using however, is beginning to beget an argument - Is the internet making us Smarter or Dumber?
Personally, I was raised on traditional beliefs and teachings: pen to pencil, eyes to paper. Print was an advancement of the ages, where the uses of words and the written language was a skill-set that the majority needed to learn. Half-way through my education however, the internet was introduced to me through the use of a computer, changing my learning pattern forever.
Because of
the internet’s sudden involvement in my life, skills like browsing, typing, researching,
even simple communicating needed to be altered and learned quickly. Something I noticed quite early was that the internet moves and changes rapidly. Everything from
the news, television, weather, music, etc. can be found on the internet. It is
an endless port or gateway to every technology outlet available.
Whether it be on mainstream computers, handheld cell phones, iPads, or even car monitors, the possibilities of outreaching knowledge & communication through the net is immeasurable. The thought of whether its presence in society is potent enough for future generations to keep using however, is beginning to beget an argument - Is the internet making us Smarter or Dumber?
Personally, I was raised on traditional beliefs and teachings: pen to pencil, eyes to paper. Print was an advancement of the ages, where the uses of words and the written language was a skill-set that the majority needed to learn. Half-way through my education however, the internet was introduced to me through the use of a computer, changing my learning pattern forever.
Because of
the internet’s sudden involvement in my life, skills like browsing, typing, researching,
even simple communicating needed to be altered and learned quickly. Something I noticed quite early was that the internet moves and changes rapidly. Everything from
the news, television, weather, music, etc. can be found on the internet. It is
an endless port or gateway to every technology outlet available.
It is
because of the sudden shift in my reality and schooling that I would have to
agree with others on the idea of being a “hybrid” of both the traditional and
21st century worlds. I am able to distinguish the difference between
tweet texts and well-versed college papers. I can shift the way my thought
process works to create two very different vocabularies and sentence structures
based on where my words are going to be placed . Facebook & work emails are
separate, and I, in return, almost have two very different distinguishable voices
for each.
I find that,
teaching yourself the difference between the two separate worlds is a lot
harder than learning them in general.
There are
however, some ideas on the internet and its presence that I have definite
thoughts and concerns about.
In the article
The New Literacy, written by Clive
Thompson, it states “The
first thing she found is that young people today write far more than any
generation before them.” – I agree with this statement and the idea that students
and people in general are writing more. How could they not be? Texting is
sweeping the nation, with millions being sent all over the world. Along with
that there’s blog’s, chat rooms, IMing, tweets, Facebook statuses, websites, the
list goes on. The internet was made to be a socializing escape. “The fact that students today almost always write for an audience
(something virtually no one in my generation did) gives them a different sense
of what constitutes good writing”. Everything that is written on the internet
is visible, making it important to everyone (reading or writing it), unlike
that one college paper for that one annoying professor.
“What today's young people know is that knowing who
you're writing for and why you're writing might be the most crucial factor of
all.”
Being an avid reader myself, I get angry when books
are available online and that people are taking advantage of the physical object
known as the novel or story. The smell, texture, and even weight of a book is
important – the internet is changing that. In fact, it’s changing how we read
as a whole.
I think the article Is Google Making Us Stupid? by Nicholas Carr sums up my thoughts on this subject quite
perfectly. “Once I was a scuba diver in the sea of words. Now I
zip along the surface like a guy on a Jet Ski.” Carr’s idea of losing the
ability to read longer pieces on the internet, I can definitely agree with.
When you’re reading a novel you are submerging yourself into a different
reality, but when you’re on the internet you don’t have time to get connected.
There are too many advertisements and other links and stories to look at or
that grab your attention. People’s attention spans are growing shorter, causing
the publications of books to diminish as the year’s roll.
I also think communication at a face-to-face level
is changing for the worse. People cannot talk in public anymore. Only through
texting or websites are they able to get their ideas and thoughts across to
others. People often use the wrong words to voice their opinions in today’s society–
mixing the traditional and the 21st century worlds together.
So is the Internet making us Smarter or Dumber?
Both.
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