Digital immigrants
          
          
        "Is Google Making Us Stupid?"
              June 17, 2008 Filed in: The real
              world |
              Ideas
            
            
              So asks Nicholas Carr in the cover article of the
                   July/August Atlantic Monthly.
                 I put this here not just because i't's an
                 interesting and worthy read, but because it
                 resonates with me, both the good and the bad. The
                 good is how the technology has quite fundamentally
                 changed my ability to write: I simply couldn't do
                 what I do with pen and paper, though like many, I
                 still like to print out an intermediate draft now
                 and then to read through end-to-end (but that may
                 be simply a lack of the right technology to enable
                 the same ability). The bad is that I, too, have
                 slowly, over a decade, gone from voracious book
                 reader to being barely able to keep up with print
                 publications like the Economist and
                 Atlantic Monthly. Perhaps the
                 glass-is-half-full explanation is just that my
                 information consumption has actually gone up; it's
                 just different. The article's mention of
                 neurological rewiring echos Marc Prensky's thought
                 in Digital natives, digital
                   immigrants part 2.
              
              
On the other hand, I can't say I resonate with the glass-is-half-empty predictions of the article. Change of the sort described just is. If indeed it's a problem - and I don't think so - then the genie is already out of the bottle and all we can do is manage the effects. Wired Magazine's cover article The End of Science and two related articles, Tap Into the 12-Million-Teraflop Handheld Megacomputer and Supercomputing Power Hits the Desktop, Minus the Software, curiously speak in some way to this issue from a different perspective.
          On the other hand, I can't say I resonate with the glass-is-half-empty predictions of the article. Change of the sort described just is. If indeed it's a problem - and I don't think so - then the genie is already out of the bottle and all we can do is manage the effects. Wired Magazine's cover article The End of Science and two related articles, Tap Into the 12-Million-Teraflop Handheld Megacomputer and Supercomputing Power Hits the Desktop, Minus the Software, curiously speak in some way to this issue from a different perspective.
Digital disorder vs the Luddite
              July 10, 2007 Filed in: The real
              world
            
            
              They've gone head-to-head on this now: an
                   interesting representation of the "Wikipedia vs
                   Britannica" debate.
              
              
David Weinberer is author of Everything is Miscellaneous: The Power of the New Digital Disorder. "We're very good at organizing things in the real world ... But ... we always have to follow two basic principles: Everything has to go somewhere, and no thing can be in more than one place. That's just how reality works. But in the digital world we're freed from those restrictions."
              
Andrew Keen is author of The Cult of the Amateur: How today's Internet is killing our culture and, as you'll see, says himself he is "a disgraceful fascist luddite communist control freak monarchist failed dotcom entrepreneur".
          David Weinberer is author of Everything is Miscellaneous: The Power of the New Digital Disorder. "We're very good at organizing things in the real world ... But ... we always have to follow two basic principles: Everything has to go somewhere, and no thing can be in more than one place. That's just how reality works. But in the digital world we're freed from those restrictions."
Andrew Keen is author of The Cult of the Amateur: How today's Internet is killing our culture and, as you'll see, says himself he is "a disgraceful fascist luddite communist control freak monarchist failed dotcom entrepreneur".
Digital natives, digital immigrants
              March 25, 2007 Filed in: Cyberspace
              2.0 |
              Ideas
            
            
              An absolute classic must-read: Digital Natives, Digital
                   Immigrants by Marc Prensky. “It is amazing
                   to me how in all the hoopla and debate these
                   days about the decline of education in the US we
                   ignore the most fundamental of its causes. Our
                   students have changed radically. Today’s
                   students are no longer the people our
                   educational system was designed to teach.”