ENGL 303: Multimedia Writing , Spring 2012 » WVU http://courses.johnmjones.org/multimedia West Virginia University, Professional Writing & Editing Tue, 03 Nov 2015 14:39:13 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1 … so we don’t have to http://courses.johnmjones.org/multimedia/2012/01/so-we-dont-have-to/ http://courses.johnmjones.org/multimedia/2012/01/so-we-dont-have-to/#comments Sun, 29 Jan 2012 23:46:27 +0000 Jake http://courses.johnmjones.org/multimedia/?p=836 Continue reading ]]> “They memorize schedules, names, addresses, phone numbers, passwords, birthday’s, and grocery lists, so we don’t have to. And increasingly, we rely on them.” -Morville, Ambient Findability, pg. 67

What are we doing to ourselves? Lots of people are starting to ask this question about the wave of dependability Americans have shifted on to the electronic devices that are starting to define our culture. We all knew this day would come, or at least it’s started to come. It seems like just yesterday I was sitting on my couch in the ’90s watching futuristic movies starring characters who could communicate and interact with a simple screen that they held in their hands. (I’m not going to get into holographs and teleportation because we still haven’t crossed that threshold yet, but you get the point) Well that day is here and are we really better off?

In Morville’s book, Ambient Findability, on page 67, he states, “.. our mobile devices also enable us to become smarter (or at least more informed) individuals.” Morville does go into how the technology is almost at a standstill right now because of limitations on hardware, but it still leaves the notion dangling that we are still yearning for more — still infatuated with the stuff that makes our lives easier to handle.

Morville’s statement regarding the technology making us smarter and more informed is somewhat misleading, because it’s not addressing the steps backward we have taken. This has been a hot subject in our classroom discussions — the fact that we no longer have to memorize phone numbers, birthdays, passwords, names, addresses, etc. We have something there to do it for us! My question is, what information have we used to fill that void in our brains? Are the memory cells once filled with information about our best friends birthdays, our emergency contact information, and our meeting times now piled up with even more song lyrics and other society-deemed useless information? Maybe. Maybe not.

In the midst of our changing culture, it’s really hard not to conform to society’s new guidelines. There are those who can manage, but there’s going to be a breaking point when it’s just not plausible to function outside of the box anymore. Consciousness is going to be key here. Consciousness to remain in touch with the information that we really need to remember. Consciousness to put down the phone or the kindle for a few minutes and re-acquaint yourself with what is literally around you at that moment. Consciousness to remember that, while knowledge is a wonderful thing and access to that knowledge is essential, life is not lived through that machine.

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Life is a party. Twitter is our dancefloor. http://courses.johnmjones.org/multimedia/2012/01/life-is-a-party-twitter-is-our-dancefloor/ http://courses.johnmjones.org/multimedia/2012/01/life-is-a-party-twitter-is-our-dancefloor/#comments Mon, 16 Jan 2012 00:55:25 +0000 Jake http://courses.johnmjones.org/multimedia/?p=427 Continue reading ]]> As I sit on the couch at my best friend’s apartment tonight, watching the demise of my family’s beloved Packers, (I’m a Browns fan) I noticed that I couldn’t put my phone down. Every 2 minutes I kept picking up my “black box,” pulling down the page to refresh. Forget facebook, that was so last year. I had to see what everyone was saying on Twitter. About the game. About life. About the weather. Anything. As my homework loomed and I thought back to the readings for class, I had to ask myself, “Jake, what are you doing?”

Twitter is a party. It’s a virtual/cyber room where every friend you know, every celebrity you want to know, and every athlete you look up to sits in the same place and talks to each other. Some people take to the corner of the room and only correspond with the few people they’re comfortable with, others try to gain the attention of @KimKardashian; there’s always that one follower that just observes and never talks (my mom), and we can’t forget the #personwhoyoucantstandbecausetheydontknowwhattheyredoing. The party never ends! Twitter is a streaming, changing, window into the world of the people that we now know way too much about.

Everyone’s favorite subject in life is themselves. Each person’s story is their masterpiece. Along with this obvious but quickly denied idea, people love to stick their noses in everyone else’s business. Starting to sound a little bit like a party? You walk in having to listen to one person talk about how they did this amazing thing. You get annoyed at that but find yourself rambling on about your dog and and how hard school is. When you catch yourself, you can’t help but eavesdrop at who your two former best friends are going on about. Starting to sound a little like Twitter?

Twitter gives us the ability to talk about ourselves. Listen to what our friends have to say. Listen to what people are saying, while they don’t know we’re listening. Twitter lets us laugh, explore, judge, connect, and express. All in 140 characters or less. While many people spend lots of time dogging Social Networking and how it is changing our world, it’s probably a lot more fun to just join the party.

 

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