Monday, February 18, 2013

World Wide Web


      I believe that in the near future, the World Wide Web will continue to strengthen itself in becoming an integral, indispensable asset for individuals, businesses, and countries.  As a society, we are becoming more and more dependent on the Internet to function in our daily lives.  Streaming services such as Netflix and Amazon Prime are becoming more and more prevalent in individuals’ lives.  From across every spectrum of society, people are constantly utilizing email services.   The search engine and information powerhouse Google is one of the largest compaines in the world.  Businesses of all kinds utilize cloud cloud computing throught the World Wide Web. According the New York Times article ‘The Cloud Challenges Amazon,’ the cloud is a service which provides storage and computing power for all kinds of Web sites and services.”  While these services such as cloud computing offer many advantages, they include drawback that we are essentially at the mercy of the services subscribed to through the World Wide Web.    As stressed in the New York Times article, ‘The Cloud Challenges Amazon’, technological services are bound to break down, and people and business must be prepared for anything.  Despite the inevitable problems of the World Wide Web, I envision the advantages of the World Wide Web outweigh its drawbacks, and people will use the World Wide Web as their primary source for communication, enjoyment, and information in making the World Wide Web an indispensable tool that is prevalent in every aspect of daily living. 

 

Monday, February 11, 2013

Networks and Communication

     As with most things, new communication technology has its pros and cons.
     New communication techology such as email, texting,  IM, and Skype have have many great great advantages that serve as proponents for their usage.  Instead of waiting weeks for such material to arrive in the mail, through the power of the internet, documents can be sent thousands of miles in seconds with the click of a button.  By utilizing video communication technology such as Skype or Face Time, the inhibition of space can be minimized as doctors can see their patients face to face.  These instant communication technologies are also helpful in the non working world.  Friends and family can communication for simple things like catching up on old times and arranging carpools or for more serious matters in times of emergency.  These functions are served in cheaper and more instantaneous ways via the likes of texting, email, and Skype.  Essentially, new communication technology offer more instantaneous and cheaper methods of communication that are utilized in many different avenues of life. 
            But these new features of communication come with a downside.  As noted in the article published by the International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction, You’ve Got Mail! Shall I Deal With It Now? Electronic Mail from the Recipients Perspective, e-mail, as it continues to play increasingly large parts of our lives, “appears to have to potential to tyrannize, overload, and enslave is users.”  I was speaking with two friends of mine, one of whom is a statistician and the other, who works in computers.  The two of them bemoaned the fact that they often spend so much time responding to emails that they feel like they cannot acually get any work done.  Email and other technologies  are so instantaneous, that we become overly absorbed in them; spending so much time and energy that we are often distracted from our other important tasks like driving and work.  Not only do they serve as distractions, but new communication technologies oftentimes bombard us with unwanted and sometimes dangerous information through the likes of spam and phishing.   These technologies have the potential to overload our lives in ways that have potentially serious ramifications. 
            Technology offers potential pitfalls, and we must work our best to mitigate them.  In concern to the dangers of unwanted information such as spam and phishing, the optimal strategy for communicatin techology users is to update the security settings on the software they are using to prevent people from gaining the information that helps promote these bothersome activities.  In regards to the issues of becoming overly distracted by new communication techology and the dangers it brings to the likes of drivers and others, the best advice I can give is to ovoid overdependence on new communication techologies and place priority on the pressing issues at hand.  We must focus on what is in front of us, and if that means putting down your cell phone while driving, then so be it.  In the end, it is up to each individual technology user to not let technology gain control of his or her life.