Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Being Healthy in a Online World?

As our society increases our dependence on technology, in the work place and in society, people are ignoring their bodies more and more. This denial of the body, in our creation of the self in an online society, is dangerous. We are dually created. We are both body and mind. To dismiss one, because of our increased dependence on technology is simply unhealthy.

Monday, March 1, 2010

On facebook...

I have never really contemplated my rejection of facebook in such a thorough manner. The question has been raised as to whether or not I purposely reject facebook because I do not want to put on a performance or create myself via a social networking site. Of course, on some level, I do not feel the need to introduce myself or "reintroduce" myself to people via the web. On the other hand, I tend to be a more private and non-technical person. I'm also not sure there is much information about myself or about my status that I would feel the need to share with others on a day to day basis. I find that my relationships with people have always flourished best when I am face-to-face, and I believe my relationship with the world is nurtured when I am in the world. For this reason, I spend little time using communicative technology.
With all of that said...some of the games seem like they may be fun.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Becoming One with Technology


In a remediated world...

In a remediated world, writing changes and adjusts. Writing becomes more accessible and utilized for variable purposes, such as blogs, websites, and communication. Writing becomes increasingly public, and the rules of “standardized writing,” are constantly challenged. Writing becomes public and often attached to visual representations such as art, photographs, or videos. Writing becomes increasingly political and words may create broader social implications.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Hmmm...

After watching the ID channel...
As technology becomes increasingly immediate, humans become increasingly dependent on technology for lived experience. By becoming part of the computer realm, people have become part of a very personal, yet contrived, community. And in doing so, these same people have given themselves to an online network that is, in some ways, uncontrollable and unpredictable. At the same time, peoples' online lives are tracked and traceable, and their past is forever archived somewhere. If society continues to become more and more immersed in a technological world, we may find ourselves living in a created place where we are constantly monitored. Or maybe we are already there.

GPS doesn't just help you find your way...it helps people find you.

Our secrets are embedded in our computer. Just watch an investigation unfold: detectives are able to find a suspect's emails, conversations, deleted documents, text messages, contacts, and online searches, and much more, just by confiscating a computer.

Discovering an Ideal Escape

Because the computer relies on repeated commands to function, and at times may not respond appropriately or timely to the commands, it becomes difficult to visualize the objects on the computer screen as “real.” Rather, as Bolter and Grusin note, computers are “too obviously mediated” (33). In this way, computers have been unable to hide the presence of their medium.
The desire to hide the medium is a desire to make real something that is not. People’s attempts to create three dimensional computer realms, where an individual feels part of the technology, represents human’s desire to control and create their reality. If humans can forget about the medium, and become part of the technology they use, they can very much escape reality into their created reality.
Of course, for some, this would be ideal.