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"More Better Faster!": How Our Spastic Digital Culture Scrambles Our Brains

By David Bollier, On the Commons. Posted June 30, 2009.


The digital communications apparatus is crowding out deeper relationships and more deliberative modes of thinking.
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One of the more pernicious enclosures of the commons is the enclosure of time and consciousness. It's pernicious because it is so subtle and rarely discerned. When commercial values such as productivity and efficiency become so pervasive and internalized, they crowd out other ways of being. Our very sense of humanity -- full-bodied, spontaneous, spiritual -- leaches away.

All of this was brought home clearly in a provocative lecture that I attended yesterday evening. It was called "No Time to Think," by David M. Levy, a professor at the Information School at the University of Washington. Levy gave a chilling historical overview of how American society has become enslaved to an ethic of "more-better-faster" and is losing touch with the capacity for reflection and intuitive thinking. In an overweening commitment to constant doing and making, analyzing and thinking (which, let us note, are important human activities), we can too easily close off access to an entire realm of consciousness that is at least as important, our capacity for reflection.

Levy's research is focused on why the technological devices that are designed to connect us also seem to radically dis-connect us. As Levy puts it, "We now have the most remarkable tools for teaching and learning the world has ever known. How is it that we have less time to think than ever before?" Although our society supposedly prizes creative thought, it in fact gives little respect to the intuitive and the contemplative.

The "information society" has a certain frenetic mindlessness to it, one that takes Henry David Thoreau's famous line in Walden to a new level entirely: "We are in great haste to construct a magnetic telegraph from Maine to Texas; but Maine and Texas, it may be, have nothing important to communicate." Twitter may be all the rage, but surely there is something pathetic about the ascendance of Twittering as our unstructured, person-to-person social time dwindles away.

This trend has only accelerated, and become more internalized, as more and more digital technologies have become incorporated into our daily routines. Email, cell phones, text-messaging, voicemail, Facebook, instant-messaging, Twitter, and of course the World Wide Web – they all serve useful roles. But I also realize at times that the digital communications apparatus has transformed our consciousness in some unwholesome ways. It privileges thinking that is rapid, productive and short-term, and crowds out deeper, more deliberative modes of thinking and relationships.

According to Thomas Eriksen of the University of Oslo, author of Tyranny of the Moment, the electronic environment systematically favors "fast time" activities that require instant, urgent responses (email, cell phone calls, etc.) Such stimuli tend to crowd out "slow time activities" such as "reflection, play and long-term love relationships," said Levy.

Levy pointed out that this dynamic has an especially perverse effect in academia, which is supposed to be somewhat insulated from the larger society so that students and scholars can think more broadly and with longer range perspectives. But in fact, universities mirror the rest of society, and the dwindling time to think is as much a problem within the academy as anywhere else. As instrumental, short-term, applied goals take center-stage, our society has less access to the wisdom and complexity that deep, reflective thinking can provide. This is a major loss.

The ancients had a word for it: "leisure." In the original sense of the word, leisure was not a consumer-oriented activity like golfing or movie-going, or even "relaxation." It involved having time to ponder and reflect on the world. The words "school" and "scholar" have their etymological roots in the Greek and Latin words for these activities, Levy noted.

According to Josef Pieper, a German Catholic philosopher, "leisure is a form of stillness that is the necessary preparation for accepting reality; only the person who is still can hear, and whoever is not still cannot hear." Pieper, writing in the 1940s, worried about a world of "total work" that would make a "total claim upon the whole of human nature."

It's safe to say that that future has arrived. The very coinage of the term 24/7 and "real time" (usually as a virtue!) confirms the ubiquitous social reality of "total work." Fast-time activities absolutely crowd out slow-time alternatives. The now eclipses the timeless. And we are becoming diminished creatures in the process.


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Turn off the TV now!
Posted by: beinghuman on Jun 30, 2009 1:50 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A wonderful article, but I'd like to point out that the main source of information overload in our society is still television and not the new medias.
Television is a one-way medium, where the channels decide for you what you can watch and in fact have momentarily controll of your brain, as the stimulus-package presented by TV is so great that it leaves very little room for your own thoughts.
In the Internet you chose freely your content from millions os sources and what is crucial; you choose the timing; you can at any time slow down and even stop to ponder and wonder if you like.
I personally stopped watching TV a couple of years ago and I claim that the overall quality of my life improved tremendously.
I now use a lot of Facebook, have three blogs of my own and run a small computer-repair business besides my day-job as a journalist, but I have ample time for all of them.
Television is not robbing my prime time, but I can use it as I myself like and in my very own time-schedule, not the one that is presented by the channel-managers.

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» Facebook? Posted by: pelican beak
i posted this elsewhere but it fits better here
Posted by: Suzon on Jun 30, 2009 2:30 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When the Founding Fathers signed the Declaration of Independence, hanging, drawing and quartering was still a legal punishment. When Benjamin Franklin said, "We must all hang together or we will all hang separately" he would have been aware of this.

Bernie Madoff was never in any danger of being hung until almost dead and then experiencing his body body being hacked into pieces, but I think that his crimes were motivated by the fear of suffering before personal extinction. Even when circumstances change, the memory lingers on...

Think of life as a game of musical chairs, only the person left without a chair when the music stops will be waterboarded, raped or otherwise tortured and then killed. Well, anyone with a strong survival instinct would do whatever they could to see that they weren't left without a chair. This includes taking all the chairs at gunpoint or even murdering all the other players.

Yes, Madoff would have found some pleasure in his lavish lifestyle, but I think he--and others who ride roughshod over others and blank out the suffering they cause--see themselves as being in constant danger. For them, the world is full of enemies when in fact it is full of potential friends.

Can we wake up from our common nightmare and create a society which is not based upon winners and losers? We have created a bad enough outcome for those who are born poor or become poor (homelessness, drugs, vulnerability to crime) to motivate plenty of people to lie, cheat and steal in order to avoid this fate.

Raise up the poorest and everyone will be better off. (That's not just a theory. See The Spirit Level: how more equal societies almost always do better by Wilkinson and Pickett.).

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» One word: Psychopaths Posted by: zigy
» Sorry... Posted by: zigy
Spastic
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Jun 30, 2009 3:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If some people want cell phones, blackberries, Facebook, Twitter, iPods, big-screen entertainment centers, and other trendy electronic crap to feed their narcissistic, attention-deficit lifestyles, that's their business. Unless your workplace has you on an electronic leash, you're free to take or leave most of it, so you can go off in the woods and contemplate the meaning of life.

The only one that really gets in my way is internet noise, eg. the "paywall" mentioned at the end of the article. If I want basic information, or to check my bank account, I have to "register", memorize passwords, remember the name of my first cat, the street where my grade school was located, my dog's favorite color, the name of the waiter on the night of our first date...Then, I have to type in those 4 or 5 mutated letters that you can't read...Then, once I get past all of that, I have to click through a bunch of ad screens. Then, if I survive all of that without crashing or freezing up, I have to deal with flashing ads and other crap that crowds the actual content into a 2 inch-wide space on the page...kind of like Alternet.

Of course, I suppose I'm free to take or leave the internet as well...Fortunately, I still have the library. And I can always wade through the crap and print a so-called "printable" version of the article, complete with toner-hogging ads, and go read it in the woods, some of which I just killed in order to print the "printable" version.

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» You're doing it wrong Posted by: Eddie Van Helsing
» RE: Spastic Posted by: MT512
» Eddie, MT512 Posted by: kepstein7777
» You forgot... Posted by: zigy
Pull the plug and flourish
Posted by: weathered on Jun 30, 2009 3:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
or stay stuck in the velocity of distractions.

This country is suffering from ADD.

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It's The Workplace Rat Race Culture That's The Problem - Not Fast Communications
Posted by: tony_opmoc on Jun 30, 2009 3:42 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you've actually got a job, in order to be competetive and keep it you're expected to work at the same kind of efficiency levels as a highly tuned machine.

This can mean that not only are you bombarded with information overload during a "normal" working day, but you may also be required to be on-call and connected via mobile phone / pager /laptop on up to a 24x7 basis.

After an extended period of this you can quickly learn to hate your mobile phone / pager /laptop and if you don't switch them off the stress can literally burn you out and turn you into a mental and physical wreck.

But I've been retired for 5 years now, and all that stress is gone, and I look and feel more than 10 years younger. I've seen exactly the same effect in many others who've retired. Work is so frenetic now, that it is literally killing people.

However, I've found totally new uses for the Internet as an educational and communications tool, that whilst working I was far too busy to even contemplate.

Having lots of free unstructured time, is extremely important not just for mental health, but also for the creative development of the mind and soul. I feel its very important to try and find out the real truth about the World we live in. Sure it can look very depressing if you simply focus on everything that's wrong. But many people with time and space not only come up with creative ideas, they actually turn them into a useful project of work. They find out what needs to be done, raise money to do it - and put together a team of volunteers to do the work. A friend of mine used to sell insurance. He now travels to the most obscure parts of the World, finds out what needs to be done in some remote village and puts together a Project to make People's lives better by for example providing clean water and sewage systems.

Large numbers of people are now becoming unemployed and are sitting in a wilderness of urban decay waiting for something to happen. Well, nothing is going to happen, unless you get off your arse and do something. You can use the Internet as a resource to find out how others are changing the World for the better rather than letting it pass them by.

Tony

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» You lack free time. Posted by: Eddie Van Helsing
» RE: You lack free time. Posted by: Birdland
» I have most of what I want out of life. Posted by: Eddie Van Helsing
I can breathe
Posted by: judep on Jun 30, 2009 4:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article helps me to take a deep healing breath. And legitimizes the fact that I seldom use my cellphone. My motto is "technology without addiction".

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More voices the better for a democracy
Posted by: Mrs. Jefferson on Jun 30, 2009 5:25 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think it is wonderful that we can hear and see so many different opinions and stories what ever way it comes to you.

Public meetings and events are suffering though. We need more of them to be happier humans.

Turn it off when you are saturated.

Without an informed and participating electorate you can't have a democracy. (Thomas Jefferson)

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Instant Communication: 16mm vs. Video Tape
Posted by: Tom Degan on Jun 30, 2009 5:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This whole argument may be accurately examined by focusing on the good ol' days broadcast journalism.

In the sixties, video technology was a fairly expensive affair. Television cameras weighed a thousand pounds or more, and the cost of raw video tape itself was prohibitive. Then in the late seventies video technology became mobile. Almost overnight, footage of a news report could be instantaneously broadcast.

The problem here is the fact that in broadcast journalism's infancy, a report would be filmed on 16mm film. In the few hours it took to film a story, develop and edit the film, a reporter covering that story had time to think over the complexities of the event he or she was covering. That no longer is the case. Far from it.

Today a reporter is expected to have the nuances of any particular report out there fro public consumption in a moment. This, of course, is impossible.

Where have you gone Eric Sevrareid, our nation turns its lonely eyes to you.

Whoo! Hoo! Hoo!

The Real Tragedy of Michael Jackson

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY

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More neo-Luddite nonsense?
Posted by: Eddie Van Helsing on Jun 30, 2009 5:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Look, the problem isn't technology, but our relationship with technology. Most people don't have the balls to say "I've had enough" and disconnect. You have a power switch. Use it. Turn it off if you want some time to think, or to connect with others.

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Not just electronic noise
Posted by: taxidriver on Jun 30, 2009 5:51 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can avoid most electronic noise simply by choosing not to have a cell phone, not to use Twitter, not to turn on the TV, etc.

What I can't avoid is my neighbor's junk yard dog barking in my face, another neighbor's leaf blower and power washer, the kids speeding by in cars with loud muffler kits installed, etc.

Finding quiet is not just about turning off the TV: It's about creating a society that values quiet and an opportunity to reflect. And, sadly, that's not our culture.

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"Multitasking" is discredited bullshit
Posted by: xvictor on Jun 30, 2009 6:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the last twenty years or so, multitasking was considered a big deal in the workplace just to stay ahead or keep afloat. But many studies concluded that the results of multitasking does not produce high quality work and the businesses suffer when their employees do so many things in so little time, with little supervision and merely produces mediocre stuff.

I've witnessed many of these 'multitaskers' who first enter the workplace young, fit, and dynamic and after a year or so look like they've aged 50 years.

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Paul Bigioni
Posted by: Bigioni on Jun 30, 2009 6:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Yet this is no Brave New World imposed by a totalitarian state." - true, but do not imagine that political control is irrelevant. The vast bulk of all economic activity is owned and/or controlled by a very small number of huge corporations. We go apeshit about big government but we don't see that these corporations have so much societal control that they have become quasi-governmental. Increasingly, we live in a centrally planned, though privately owned society. It is in the interests of the central planners to keep you constantly working and, in the fewer and fewer hours of your leisure time, to distract you with meaningless entertainments. This keeps you powerless and isolated so that your only social function is to contribute to the planners' private profits. A little more like Brave New World than the author of this excellent article may think.

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From TS Eliot's Choruses from "The Rock"
Posted by: brunowe on Jun 30, 2009 6:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The endless cycle of idea and action,
Endless invention, endless experiment,
Brings knowledge of motion, but not of stillness;
Knowledge of speech, but not of silence;
Knowledge of words, and ignorance of The Word.
All our knowledge brings us nearer to our ignorance,
All our ignorance brings us nearer to death,
But nearness to death no nearer to God.
Where is the Life we have lost in living?
Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?
The cycles of Heaven in twenty centuries
Brings us farther from God and nearer to the Dust.

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Information overload
Posted by: messedup on Jun 30, 2009 6:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was glad when TV went digital, now I don't watch TV. I'm glad I'm single, Generally any message I get from anyone about anything is somebody asking me to do something for them.

The last time I went to the cellphone store I looked at these new phones and thought to myself, how can I get rid of this thing..

And, I think I'm going to do just that.

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Scrambled
Posted by: AAWeeble3 on Jun 30, 2009 7:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
LOL, my brain got scrambled a LONG time ago!

RT
Is your ISP Watching??

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Twitter
Posted by: Chuck23 on Jun 30, 2009 8:14 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wanted to read this, but it was too long. Can someone send me a Twitter on this?

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colonizing consciousness
Posted by: Jaffe on Jun 30, 2009 8:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That's right, the global monolith has a stake in our colonized consciousness, in our inhabiting Twitter rather than "real time."

Some forty years ago EF Schumacher wrote about the virtues of "intermediate technology", which is to say a functional technology that is useful to people, including those who are currently shut out, like the elderly and a good part of the "third world."

Instead technology has its foot on the accelerator down to the floor. If it can be done, do it, irrespective of its general (not to mention humanistic) applications.

While the technocrats in Geneva or Brussels or Washington in their identical suits and ties nod their heads in approval.

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» Dead-on right, Jaffe... Posted by: zigy
Turn me into a Borg!
Posted by: zooeyhall on Jun 30, 2009 8:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the things I shake my head at is the trend where people have their cell phones as a headset, already clamped to their ear. There is something disconcerting about seeing these people walking around, apparently talking to themselves. Until you realize they are having a phone conversation.

It wouldn't surprise if some brilliant "entrepeneur" comes up with a way to wire these devices directly into the brain. I swear, there would be people eager and glad to be the first to have it. "Sign me up for the surgery!"

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» RE: Turn me into a cyborg! Posted by: Changling
» Yikes! Sorry... Posted by: zigy
» RE: Ergonomic Evolution Posted by: MT512
» RE: rgonomic Evolution Posted by: pelican beak
» RE: rgonomic Evolution Posted by: MT512
» RE: rgonomic Evolution Posted by: pelican beak
» RE: rgonomic Evolution Posted by: MT512
» RE: rgonomic Evolution Posted by: pelican beak
» RE: rgonomic Evolution Posted by: MT512
» RE: rgonomic Evolution Posted by: pelican beak
"May you live in interesting times"
Posted by: willymack on Jun 30, 2009 9:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The old Chineese admonition is alive and well, nowadays.
I STILL love spending time in a well stocked library or bookstore. Powell's bookstore in Portland, Or. is a good example of the latter.
If I want to know something fast, I don't hesitate to go to google.com or some other repository of information. After all, Portland is almost 300 miles away.
Believe it or not, the Electronic Age is still in its infancy, and its true promise has yet to be realized. This would be a truly educated and well-informed public.
The choice between spending many hours pouring through various tomes at the library or using the latest electronic updates is still there, as is the WORK of educating and refining yourself. You have to put in the time and energy to attain the education and refinement in any case.

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Ridiculous anti-tech nonsense written by someone over 50 who can't handle tech
Posted by: DaBear on Jun 30, 2009 9:36 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can tech be jangling ("scrambling")? Sure. Does it have to be? No. This is very old news.

Reality check: The owning class has chosen to make us all into time-slaves fro their profit. We didn't choose it, they did. They make us work 100+ hour weeks for a pittance while they experience "leisure." The only other people with time to slow down and turn off are poor people... and I speak from experience... it ain't pleasurable this "leisure" time to "reflect" and shit. It's stressful, because it's more time to contemplate the empty cupboard, stalled out fridge and empty gas tank and the pile of utility bills you'll never be able to pay down.

Owning class writers need to stop writing anti-tech claptrap and focus on something serious that actually impacts people... like why their peers do things the way they do and the impact their decisions and choices have on the rest of us. I do love their gadgetry, but it's too god damned expensive when you're living on less than nothing. Maybe owning class writers should write about why their buddies need to charge so damned much for broadband access or teevee or ifones and shit.

Whaddaya think, rich boyz? Can you write about something relevant like that? Do you really need all that profit? Punk? Huh? Do ya?

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» Stop counting on the "owning class" Posted by: Eddie Van Helsing
We talk more and say less –– and understand even less than that.
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jun 30, 2009 9:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Yet this is no Brave New World imposed by a totalitarian state; we are 'voluntarily' doing it to ourselves."
. . . . . .

Not entirely true. "Market forces" have replaced the totalitarian state.

"We" are only doing it to ourselves because we have internalized the incessant advertising that "they" – the companies that invent and market technocrap – have brainwashed us with. The fact is, we have been led down this road of 24/7 connectivity, cellphones nearly permanently attached to every ear, and no peace or quiet anywhere, because of "they" who are doing it for one reason only: to push product for profit.

This is also a partial reason for the frenetic pace of life: after all, the fanaticism for more information and the means to get it ever more quickly, and the need not to be left out of the "hip" crowd, means that ever more product can be sold, which means ... surprise! ... more profit.

In the personal electronics/communications industry, planned obsolescence has been taken to an absurd level, leading to third world "recycling centers" –– where we send our months-old, no-longer-hip cellphones and other spent techno-bling –– being turned into ecological disasters of poisons, chemicals, and heavy metals. But, who cares, as long as one can watch cheaply-produced "reality" television on one's cheaply-produced, but absolutely the latest, cellphone?

Thoreau was way ahead of his time. Of course, now that we never have enough time thanks to all that "information," there might not be many more Thoreau's in our future ... if anybody's even listening anymore.

When the epitaph for the Human Race is finally written, it might say:

"They were too clever for their own good."

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Those who do not reflect are unaware of the consequences of their actions...
Posted by: La Colombetta on Jun 30, 2009 10:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Before I comment, I want to say that I am not anti-tech, and actually I don't think the author is either. I think that our immature 'premature ejaculation' culture is mostly a disease that started spreading in the 80s. We are not taking calculated risks anymore whatsoever. Instead, we are ingesting the poison of corporate culture and spewing it up over and over again, like a very sick bulimic person. Technology may be to blame a bit for encouraging this mentality, but the sickness was there long before it developed.

Artists are generally very reflective individuals, who are usually exiled when the state starts heading in a Fascist direction. They are labeled with pejorative terms and called 'dreamers,' but it's thanks to them that people have been made to think twice about their actions and how they have or will impact society. We teach our children to think a little before they do something they will regret. It's time we practiced what we preach.

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it's official: AL FRANKEN WINS!
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Jun 30, 2009 11:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
comtech is good for something, see?

#@!

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Experts bury us
Posted by: foreverhope on Jun 30, 2009 3:22 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alvin Toffler:

In describing today's accelerating changes, the media fire blips of unrelated information at us. Experts bury us under mountains of narrowly specialized monographs. Popular forecasters present lists of unrelated trends, without any model to show us their interconnections or the forces likely to reverse them. As a result, change itself comes to be seen as anarchic, even lunatic.

**********

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» RE: xperts bury us Posted by: zigy
» RE: xperts bury us Posted by: mtnprivy
speed kills
Posted by: maxsmart on Jun 30, 2009 4:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Speed for speed sake is no efficiency. It allows you to avoid meeting yourself.

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» RE: speed kills Posted by: maxsmart
» RE: speed kills Posted by: La Colombetta
Consciousness raising article...
Posted by: zigy on Jun 30, 2009 4:55 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
helps me not loss sight of how insidious (and invasive) instant communication technology can be. Many of these devices seem to have an addictive quality for certain personality types not unlike suger or nicotene. I take classes at a community college and am endlessly amazed by the people who sit with glazed eyes and sullen countenences who, upon being released from class, feel the need to run out and immediatly call someone (often a person to whom they need not even identify themselves, apparently each taking the other for granted) on their cell phone, rather than to talk to or even make eye contact with their classmates and or professor. Some of these electronic devices seem to be, to say the least socially isolating and to venture a conjecture, soul killing. I must say, I disagree with the position that says, "if you don't like them, just don't use them". I believe many young people do not yet have the discriminatory capacity (if introduced to these devices at too young an age) to discern the damage they are causing themselves; I recall an article from several months ago that claimed that children who spent too much time on cell phones and face book were not wiring their brains properly in the sense that they were not learning to patiently listen to another person and learn the tacit rules to, and participate in a face to face conversation.

I gave up television about four years ago, and it was among the better decisions I have made. I spend most evenings dining in candle light listening to classical music wondering how I ever wasted so many thousands(?) of hour mesmerized by that thing. Idiot box, indeed.

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» cell phones in the toilet Posted by: frantic1971
» Thanks for the laugh... Posted by: zigy
BA
Posted by: mnstra on Jun 30, 2009 9:33 PM   
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If you are talking on a cell phone while driving or crossing the street, and you have an accident . You die not the phone company -- it i is making the $ on your talking.and your death.....

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technology is our downfall
Posted by: xmvince on Jul 1, 2009 11:42 AM   
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Technology is making us lazy and shortening our attention span. Many people I know who grew up with the internet have terrible problems paying attention to things and can only learn something if it is displayed in a quick, easy manner. No more reading the manuals or sitting down to read a book and relax - instead we've got our big screen TV's to help keep our minds off all our troubles.

Technology is great and can help the world, but it can and always will be used for negative purposes. The more technology controls the world, the less we control ourselves. The less we control ourselves, the stupider and worse off our situation will be.

I am an IT guy, going to college for computers & security and I hate technology and wish I could have lived as a warrior hundreds of years ago before guns. Power and knowledge was respected and revered, but now even a retard can get information on Google. We've spread the power out too much and made it too easy to get. When power and knowledge were hard to get - mostly only the ones who deserved it were able to attain it as they worked long and hard for it.

Now anyone with a brain can use that power like it's nothing - which has caused this terrible situation in which we are all stuck in.

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sex
Posted by: sex on Jul 6, 2009 2:29 AM   
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Our tools have yet to eliminate choice
Posted by: socrates2 on Jul 6, 2009 11:12 PM   
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Come on, folks.
All this technology and toys are just more and mere tools.
We can either use them for their intended purpose or get hooked on them. It remains our choice. What's the problem? As another poster wrote in: turn off your damned TV once in a while. There is nothing to watch. It's all eye-candy. Occasionally, the History Channel, NatGeo, Discovery and PBS have something decent on. If you must see drama, rent decent film classics for a buck.
Your life. Your choice.

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Two weeks on and this drivel is still making the rounds...
Posted by: DaBear on Jul 6, 2009 11:31 PM   
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And still no one has noticed the irony of the owning class writer publishing a critique of "digital culture" in digital format on the internet...

Because it's all about the band wagon for the cool rich kids...

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Excellent article on communication technology on Counterpunch 7-6-09
Posted by: zigy on Jul 7, 2009 8:24 AM   
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A must read article by a Sonoma State prof. (emeritus) on what the new technology may be doing to kid's brains. You technophiles need to read this and think about what he is saying...

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The Wonder of it All
Posted by: When In Doubt on Jul 7, 2009 4:04 PM   
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And the commentaries prove the point.
Long live the sheep.
Needing only one shepherd...the Blackberry

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