As I sit here writing this, I have earphones on. I’m listening to some music (The Be Good Tanyas, if you’re interested). I’m tapping my foot. And I have my email client open, so when an email comes in I hear a little “Bing” noise and can see it right away. And I have iChat open with windows for AIM, Bonjour, and Jabber (Google Talk) so my friends, family, and colleagues can reach me that way. And every few minutes my Twitter client pops up with a new tweet from someone I’m following. And my cellphone is next to me, in case I get a call or a text message. I have nine tabs open on my browser. A large file is uploading to the server in my FTP program, and a movie to watch later is downloading in iTunes.
I will say this. I’m not watching television. 🙂
Is technology changing us? Am I over-connected? I can think of many things I’ve learned and ideas I’ve expanded because I have so many close connections immediately available. If I want to consult on an idea for a Tech Fair or one of the Macaulay seminars, I can reach out on Google Talk or the ITF listserv and get good advice almost immediately. I have people on twitter, faculty and instructional technologists all over the world who not only help me with specific problems or questions, but tell me about good restaurants, weather and natural disasters, funny stories and moral dilemmas, outrageous oppression and celebrations of birthdays and holidays.
As a human being, I’m social and need my connections to other people. And technology has widened those connections, as we’ve been discussing, in many ways. But we’ve all heard the stories, too, of over-sharing and over-connecting. The teenagers who send nude or partially-clothed pictures of themselves to their boyfriends or girlfriends, only to find those pictures distributed to the whole school. The couple at a romantic dinner at a restaurant, both with their eyes and thumbs glued to their iPhones and Blackberries. Would it be so wrong to disconnect–to not be in contact for a period of time?
Some of you have written about observing the Sabbath–of disconnecting from the electronic world for a period of 24 hours or more. That kind of disconnection might really lead to closer connections. I’m hoping to go on vacation for a week this summer–and I’m thinking of going to a place with no internet…but I’m making absolutely sure that there is still 3G coverage there. Just in case. A few years ago I went on a vacation to a beautiful resort in Hawaii (I know, lucky me, right?). There was no internet, no phones, no television, no radio, no newspapers. Not even air conditioning. I didn’t even take an iPod. It was a wonderful vacation, and I didn’t miss all those “connections” at all.
And there’s multi-tasking. There is some dispute about whether or not such a thing is even possible. Are our brains really even designed to do this successfully? People try to drive and talk on the phone (or worse!). It’s pretty well documented that that doesn’t work out. But I know that while working on an electronics project or cooking, I can certainly listen to a podcast or the radio or an audiobook. It seems like there are two or more parts of the brain that can work on different things at the same time.
I’ve been following some of the discussion about the iPad, and one of the big complaints is that it doesn’t multi-task. You can have one application open at a time, and to switch to another one, you have to really switch–closing the first one and opening the second. But on my computer right now, if I switch away from writing this mini-lecture and go to my email or to search the web for an article I remember, am I really multi-tasking? Or am I really switching back and forth–even if I’m doing that rapidly. When I leave this post open, go to my email, and come back, is my mind still working on this post?
I’m sure everyone has had the experience of working out a difficult problem (in whatever subject). You get stuck, and go do something else (sleep, eat, exercise, dance). And then (sometimes) if you come back to the original problem, the answer is right there waiting for you. Your brain did its own multi-tasking, and even if you didn’t know it, while you had your “dancing” application open, your brain was still processing the “problem” application in the background.
Has technology changed this for you? Are you different than you were, or different from your ancestors, because of technology?
Leave a Reply
You have to register to add a comment.