Tuesday, December 12, 2006


All right folks, this is my last entry. After all the bitc*ing I have done in the past about technology and the internet, (just because i did not understand it), having done some research on this blogger project, I have come to the conclusion that the technology world is not as bad as i had once thought. Maybe with more understanding, I can change my veiws a little bit...

Thanks Mr. H. for opening my eyes to this concern...


Here is an example of the uses of the internet for "good" purposes. This story explains how the U.S. used Google to find out about terriorsts in Iran...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,,1969797,00.html#article_continue

I guess after some digging, i have come to the conclusion that technology is not that bad after all...
Hey it is me again. just wanted to commit on the technology crisis we have in america. so many people need technology to survive, but i think we will do fine without it. I will find some info on the web to support this fact...

There have been signs of limited success toward upgrading incompatible and aging wireless systems following the 2001 terror attacks and last year's Hurricane Katrina. Many experts remain worried that improvements are being implemented so slowly that the next emergency will bring deadly communications breakdowns again.http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/fn/4394976.html here is the link to the website that i copied this information from...

Monday, December 11, 2006

The main purpose of my blog entries is to show that while technology is great, one cant depend on it. I think i will try to dig deeper into this theory.
In addition to the heroism shown by police and firefighters at Ground Zero on Sept. 11, 2001, there were waves of confusion and miscommunication. Sometimes there was no communication at all when it was needed the most. The 9/11 Commission documented in its historic report from July 2004 how bungled communication in the disaster zone might have prevented some firefighters from getting a critical message that day: to evacuate the North Tower, after the South Tower had already pancaked in lower Manhattan. This is to show how communication can fail at the wrong time therefore putting lives in danger. Now nothing this serious has happened to me, it can happen to anybody...
Marshall McLuhan discovered the theory of technological determinism and did so by dividing it into four periods: a tribal age, a literature age, a print age, and an electronic age. McLuhan believed that "inventions in technology invariably cause cultural change" (Griffin, 1997, p.343). The media in turn shapes us as we use our senses to see, hear, touch, taste and smell what they depict on television, in magazines, in textbooks, on radio and other forms of media. McLuhan stated, "Media are anything that amplify or intensify a bodily organ, sense, or function" (Grifin, 1997, p.343).
In relation to our American society, we have been surrounded by media all our lives. A typical child grows up watching cartoons, movies, and other programs on televsion. We listen to our parents read us books while we pay close attention to the pictures and colors we see. If we hear the radio use bad language, we repeat what is said in hopes of learning a new word. Every day we are surrounded my some from of media and bit by bit it has molded us into the human beings we are today.
Starting from birth it is essential that human beings experience each phenomenal pillar in our lives. In my own life it is apparent that I have experienced each technological age.
The tribal age is described by McLuhan as an acoustic place where the senses of hearing, touch, taste, and smell are developed far beyond the ability to visualize. When I was a mere cell developing into a baby inside my mother, my senses were developing before I even knew what they were. As a baby I grabbed for things to put into my mouth, just like curious babies do. Soft sounds before bedtime relaxed me and mother's parfume had a distinct smell. These first experiences of hearing, touching, tasting and smelling served as a foundation for my natural instincts as an adult.
The age of literacy, which serves as the visual sense, developed after the tribal age- teaching people that reading and writing is possible. I can remember when I first learned to read and write. It seemed as though I moved into a new world where I could understand all things around me. I had the wild imagination, only now I could write what I saw. The alphabet was a maze and I knew how to encode and decode my messages.
The print age developed soon after literacy. Now mass productions of identical products could be made. This age I relate to my first trip to a library. I couldn't believe my eyes. I wanted them all to be mine. This opened my thoughts to explore books of all kinds and to travel anywhere I imagined possible. It never ended from here.
Buiding on electronic communication devices for years and years has led us into computer technology in the 20th century. The electronic age has allowed information to travel at unbelievable speeds. When I started school I learned what a computer was and how to use it. It seemed like a time machine to me that I would never figure out. And now that I sit in front of a computer and develop a web page, I am amazed at the ability one machine can have. As McLuhan states,"we've gone back to the future." Sound and touch are more important than sight. This is a summary of mcluhan's theory. I hope you all like this. still have not found out how to post a link so i cut and pasted. This goes with what i have been trying to say.

Thursday, December 7, 2006

I was gonna commit on the advantages and disadvantages of computers in today's society. I am in the middle of editing my sound ops final project and i appreatiate the computer. With out it i could not get it done at all. That does not mean that the computer has not giving me fits. The computer crashed a few times in the middle of doing something and that is really aggravating. I guess one must get used to the fact that this is going to happen. Like i said, it would not be possible without...

Thursday, November 30, 2006

I was in a Burger King last night and i had a strange thing happen to me.(not) It turnds out that the computers that you take the orders on had a minor hic-up in them. This is one of the things that i am most un happy with. When one depends on computers to do most of our work for us, the computers often do not do what we want them to. I think when society puts the tasks that a man should do in the hands of a machine, it takes away from a man. That is almost a direct quote from a movie, all though i dont remember what movie that comes from. If i am not mistaking the movie was I-Robot...