Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Cover Letter


Dear Reader,

At first, I really was not looking forward to having another English class.  I was in love with music and felt like I didn’t need to study anything else since music was my major.  So, beginning my English 1 class my writing skills were probably not as high as they were back in high school as it has been years since I had attended an English class.  The only thing I truly remembered was the five paragraph form essay which was all I mainly practiced.  My grammar was a bit off as I grew accustomed to today’s technology writing quick texts with shortened words.  Also, my vocabulary was not as advanced as I would have liked it to be.  I wasn’t much of a complex writer as I would procrastinate and write my essays quickly before the deadline.  This semester I tried to regain the writing skills I once had as I had forgotten most of them.  Doing a Works Cited page was my main concern since I was never really good at it and often would misplace the location of certain authors and articles.

Reading and annotating, which deals with writing notes and highlighting the main points of the reading, was something I had never done before.  When I would read, I would just highlight key points but never reflected on the writing and wrote down my thoughts or questions.  I found this to be truly helpful as it made it easier to relate to the article and quickly go back to see the point of the highlighted areas.  Plus, when it came to going back to articles I had previously read, having these notes helped me quickly find some work to quote and plug in to my essays.  

Having a brainstorming session beforehand made my essay a lot better and easier to write.  Before, I would just go with the flow and write what came to mind.  Having a basis though, made the writing easier as I knew what topics I would keep and just elaborate on them.  I now use previous methods that I learned in high school that I found useless to me then.  My two main methods include roman numerals and using clustering.  Though, the roman numerals help organize my ideas, I have found that clustering lets me expand my ideas and see both sides of the issue at hand.
Essay’s became easier to write with the use of multiple drafts.  Normally, my first draft was my final draft.  Having peer edit sessions greatly increased the feedback I needed and helped me understand what sections I needed help in and how to word things at times.  From time to time I would procrastinate which was my main obstacle, just as many others.  Having my peers comments led me to see the mistakes I would make and how to correct them.  Most were simple mistakes that I overlooked as I would rush the paper.  Now, whenever I have a paper due I always make sure to leave time open so that I can have a friend or a professor help review my paper.  

The most important improvement I had was properly writing a works cited page.  I’m normally able to quote an author and put it in quotation marks properly, but when it came to the works cited page, I would get confused.  Having examples of film and print sources for works cited made it easy to follow.  Simple things that I would leave out such as the films year or stating what type of source it was became apparent after doing a few exercises.  

At this point I feel like I do write my essays better; the only problem I still face though is my timing issue.  Once I sit down and plan ahead I find out my papers come out much better.  Having sources will help me in the long run as I know I will forget things as I grow so going back to previous works will help me get back on the right path.

Everything I have learned thus far will definitely help me in the long run.  I have had other classes during this time and most have required me to do some sort of writing.  Using the processes I learned in this class made it much easier to write papers for other classes and get better grades.  My writing has been more effective and scholarly.  I know for a fact these skills will help me in my future classes as I continue my higher education.  I will know to set time for my writings and not just rush through it like I normally do.  Having all these processes that I have learned has made writing easier and more enjoyable.   It is simple to express myself now that I know the steps to take, what questions to answer, and how to properly argue a topic.  I truly despised English at first but now I can actually say I enjoy it.


Sincerely,
Daniel Lopez

The Human Machine



The Human Machine
Automated robots in a nursery home, jets flying in the atmosphere without a pilot, and even robot assembly lines creating robots.  This all seems like the next installment of Terminator, but in reality it is already here in our lives.  We have seen an increasing amount of technology come out in the past 50 years that has never been seen before.  We can now replace a dead limb with machines that help us regain our senses in lost regions of the body.  Before, if a loved one left the country on a business venture, we would have to wait for their return to see them.  Today, we have phones that allow us to have a video chat no matter where in the world people are.  Just a couple of years back people were still using brooms to sweep the floor of their house.  Now, we have Roomba’s, little automated machines that can do this work for us.  On the one hand, this has made cleaning up the house a lot easier, but has it also made us lazy?  Has life been replaced by these cold, steel-like machines that we value so much in our lives?  Or are we just in fear of them becoming self-aware just as in the film I, Robot?  Although technology has helped us create these machines that help prolong human life while also making life easier, these same advancements have led humanity to live in an overpopulated, lazy, and lifeless world.
The benefits that machines have brought to humanity are readily apparent.  From simple microwaves preparing a frozen dinner to giant purifiers cleaning the water supply,  machines have benefited us all in one way or another.  Artificial limbs could help replace a wounded soldier’s arm, giving him a second chance of holding his baby in his arms.  To further aid soldiers in combat, machines are being produced that will someday replace the soldier to greatly reduce casualties of war.  In the workplace, machines have made the workplace a safer place to be. They can reach places humans can’t or do extraordinary tasks that our bodies will not allow us to accomplish.  For example, they can crawl into a tiny hole to help look for survivors after a natural disaster.  Even automobile technology has lowered the chances of bumper-to-bumper accidents by allowing vehicles to park themselves.  These machines are becoming more lifelike as the years go by and are reaching peaks only imagined by science fiction writers.  Machines are being utilized in nursing homes to help take care of the elderly not just by caring for them, but also by providing the comfort of another individual, essentially removing humans from the picture.  In turn, leaving machines to run the world instead of us.
But, with all these innovations that have helped advance human life, we have also dumbed down society to a certain extent.  In the words of the great Albert Einstein, “It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity.”   Great advances in technology does not necessarily mean we have evolved as a species, especially when these advancements are nothing more than a means to show off status.  For example, Apple comes out with a new product almost every six months and all that is added is a one-point megapixel camera upgrade from the previous model.  Most of these upgrades aren’t needed, yet we desire them. It’s in our nature to discover new things, but as we discover new ways to make life easier, we reduce our work ethic.
Having machines do most of the work for us has made most people lazy.  More and more technology is being created that makes us stay at home because there is no need to go outside. One can simply go online to purchase groceries and have it delivered to their homes.  Instead of traveling to a nearby hill or mountain for a hike, video game sensors allow people to simply turn on their television and do physical movements in place to simulate a hike or workout.  Some can argue that to an extent you are still reaching peak physical activity.  Yet, you won’t feel the same incline of a mountain or the changing steepness of a hill, as well as the reduced oxygen that helps expand your lung capacity.  In the film Wall-E (2008), “Operation Cleanup” is put in place since humans have practically destroyed the planet.  With the company BnL(Big & Large), the population has grown extremely fat and obsessed with shopping for the latest gear, all while living away from the planet. The robots in the film do all the work for society, even raise the babies.  In a similar way, machines today have already began taking our place as parents.  Handheld devices and even the latest toys, some replicating laptops and iPad’s, distract children for hours on end leaving parents with the freedom to kickback and relax.  Even teenagers get obsessed with devices such as video game consoles, mp3 player’s, and even more with their phones.  Games on these devices, as well as consoles, hook children into staying indoors, rather than being outside in the sunlight and exercise their young muscles. Ultimately, they become drones stuck in a virtual world.
While machines help prolong our lives, they have the potential to create a new problem, overpopulation.  In the trailer for the film Surrogates (2009), it is said “Become anyone you would like to be from the comfort of your home.”  A surrogate is a machine that can be either male or female and any user who could afford one could plug-in into a chair and pass all neurological thoughts onto the machine and live one’s life in this robot.  While in hindsight this seems like fun and games, people do not realize the implications this would cause.  The population would safely be indoors while their surrogate would live another life outside of the home.  This would double the population instantly.  In the short story “The Veldt” publisher William Morrow wrote, “They walked down the hall of their soundproofed, Happy-life Home, which had cost them thirty thousand dollars installed, this house which clothed and fed and rocked them to sleep and played and sang and was good to them”(7).  Eventually, this is the route that rich home owners will strive for to make life easier.  Leaving their homes to do all the work for them.  
New medical technologies may also help increase the world’s overall population.  Advanced medical technologies become more affordable as time passes and help cure diseases that just a few years ago would have been an epidemic.  On the one hand, saving lives is the right thing to do, but added lives only use up more resources, especially when they just consume and not produce.  This increase in the number of people could lead to issues in housing and food shortages.  The more people that are on this earth, the faster natural resources fade away.  We are already in a global fuel crisis and adding more people to the equation means a faster depletion of these resources.  Tensions will grow as people have an increasing need for supplies.  With an increased population, and machines running things day to day, people will be left unemployed,  stuck at home with nothing to do.  Machines would complete every task imaginable, getting a sense of life, instead of humans living their lives.
The central fear in many science fiction films is that machines will develop their own minds and emotions.  This is becoming more apparent as advances have helped give robots a human-like appearance.  In the film, I Robot (2004) it is said “A robot cannot harm a human being.”  For a machine to be able to harm a person, something must have triggered it because machines aren’t allowed to think for themselves.  But, we are giving machines a more human-like appearance with every new invention brought up.  We’re in a time where we can ask our phone a question and it responds to us instantly.  Robots in Japan are continuing to evolve by having faster and smoother movements as well as facial expressions that only us has humans can have.  Machines, like the Roomba, continue to do the work for us while we just sit at home.  This is what fuels the fear of machines eventually becoming human.  The film Terminator depicts machines in a stage where they have become “self-aware” and essentially take over the world in an effort to destroy the human race.  These fears brought on by films have been around for years and as new machines are being created, people are realizing that there might be some truth behind these fears.  If machine’s continue to be produced at this rate we could lose this world to them and soon see ourselves as if we were the primates of this world.
Machines are leading humans to a lazy existence in an overpopulated world filled with human-like machines.  People need to start living more and not let machines run their lives for them.  Sure it makes life easier, but at what cost? We need to keep this planet in our hands and not let machines run it.  Just as Elbert Hubbard once said, “One machine can do the work of 50 ordinary men.  No machine can do the work of one extraordinary man.”  Be extraordinary.






Works Cited
Bradbury, Ray. “The Veldt.” The Illustrated Man. Eds. William Morrow. 1997. 7. Print.
I Robot. Dir. Alex Proyas. Perf. Will Smith, Bridget Moynahan, and Bruce Greenwood. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation, 2004. Film.
Surrogates. Dir. Jonathan Mostow. Perf. Bruce Willis, Radha Mitchell, and Ving Rhames. Touchstone Pictures, 2009. Film.
Wall-E. Dir. Andrew Stanton. Perf. Ben Burtt, Elissa Knight, and Jeff Garlin. Pixar Animation Studios, 2008. Film.

Personal Narrative



The Musician in Me


Beginning with my first year at Lynwood High School, I seemed to be part of the “unpopular kids.”  With a fresh new bowl cut and pair of glasses, I was instantly named Harry Potter.  The nickname eventually gave way to a new one: Fuzzy.  It was given to me by my fourth grade teacher for my short afro-like hair, and the name has stuck with me ever since my elementary days and has no sign of giving up.  In order to ignore this insult I turned to music and focused my energy into producing it.  Music became a passion of mine and whenever a new acquaintance came into my life, they instantly knew me by Fuzzy.  Eventually, high school paved the way for who I was, college gave me the opportunity to reinvent myself, it gave me a chance to be the person I wanted to become.  In this paper I will explain who I was in high school, the limitations it gave me, and the freedom I eventually found in college.
Walking into my first day of school, all I remember hearing was, “Hey Look! It’s Harry Potter!”  It didn’t bother me much, mainly because I had no idea of who he was.  Eventually the name faded away as my hair grew longer.   That’s when Fuzzy, which I had previously been known as, made a comeback.  Although I was given this name years ago, it quickly became annoying as many people hardly ever new my real name.  Variations such as fuzz nuts, the fuzz, and fuzzer were just a few of the names that were constantly thrown at me.  In turn, I decided to dedicate most of my time into learning how to play the guitar.  I would easily get lost in the music.  Music was my wonderland.  I wasn’t Daniel anymore, I was Fuzzy.  I decided to personify this new self through music. 
Music was all I cared about in high school.  Coming home from school I would make a daily trip into my sanctuary to get lost in my musical wonderland to shut out the world outside.  In truth, my love of music began in middle school when I dabbled with guitar riffs to impress my friends.  But in high school, I decided to take a more serious approach and switch up to my newfound instrument: Drums.  Guitarists seemed to have sprung out all over the city at the same time I picked up this instrument so I chose what almost no one else was doing which was drums.  Now, I had to keep my drums in a stable location as it was nearly impossible to be mobile with them.  My garage, where I decided to place my drums, became my sacred lair mainly because my parents hardly allowed me to go out.  Furthermore, this didn’t help out my street credibility at all.  Once I had ran out of excuses to give to my friends, I became the timid, momma’s boy.  As lame as it seemed I found a way to make the best of it.  If I couldn’t go out with my friends, then my friends could come to my house instead.  Thus, jamming out became an everyday thing between me and my friends.  Soon after, we created our first band.  No name and no real motivation to create new music, we became a cover band.  It began with Iron Maiden covers and eventually moved on to bands such as Pink Floyd and The Black Dahlia Murder.  Interested in improving my drumming skills, I decided to join the school’s drum line.  I had no idea what that was or that it was a part of the marching band.  Eventually, this new hobby became my new high school life.  Although, in my head this seemed like a good way to improve my popularity, all it did was make me seem like a band geek.
Senior year was a time of slacking off, I had nothing to look forward to.  Yet, being one of the top heads of the drum line and basically being able to do whatever I wanted, I decided to just shut down.  I got lazy and didn’t feel like I had to do much work anymore.  Up to this point I was a straight-A student and I felt like I knew all I needed to know.  Being near the top of my class didn’t help much either as I became lazy.  I became more interested in having fun rather than sitting at home doing my homework.  Finally, I was able to enjoy my high school life without much criticism from friends or family.  I began playing soccer which meant more time to have fun and less time to study.  Video games were a major part of my life as I had always been a geek.  Knowing I was soon to graduate, I spent more and more time playing games rather than completing homework.  Having easy classes didn’t help either.  I slacked off, turned in my work late, and for the first time in my educational career I began to ditch school.  Worst of all I stopped playing music, which put me in a state of confusion about my future.  Even with all this lack of motivation, I got accepted into all the California State Universities I applied to.  But, I had no real motivation to attend any college, and no college fund to pay for school.
With no job and no way of paying for a Cal State education without loans,  my best course of action was to attend a community college.  Location was a major issue as I wasn’t able to travel far.  Thus, I ended up at Long Beach City College.  Having previously thought about attending a state university, I decided to go through the general education classes, which I hated.  Choosing classes just because I was told to do so made me feel like another worker bee in a hive.  The norm is what I hated and to me higher education was just that.
The slacking off continued as I still hadn’t found my true self.  College classes made it extremely easy to not attend, but at what risk?  My grades suffered as did my motivation to continue with class.  It seemed as if I were taking the same high school classes all over again.  The same math problems, same government issues in political science, and the same scientific theories.  No matter how hard I tried to put myself in the position of a college student,  I always ended up feeling empty inside.  After all the simple GE classes that I would take, I finally looked into taking a music class.  
Digital Sampling and Recording was the beginning of the rest of my life.  At first glance, this classroom was amazing.  Old school synthesizers that ran with floppy discs, Mac computers on each station alongside mixers, and giant speakers to listen back to it all.  This was truly heaven, even if I had no idea of how to use any of it.  It felt as if I was in a studio back in the late 60’s recording a Pink Floyd album.  I had found myself again.  I have never heard such sounds before, or seen the methods been used to record and write music.  After taking this class I realized there was an increasing number of music classes being offered.
Following my passion of music eventually helped me find myself.  I felt like a new person attending college; I actually wanted to participate and learn.  Each semester was filled with nothing but music.  This led to meeting people who would eventually advance my career.  With these new friends, we created our own studio.  Following our dreams we began to create music and help other artists in need.  Every other day I would work with a new artist and style of music.  I continued to meet famous people that I’ve only heard about in magazines or on the radio such as the DJ for CunningLinguists and even Kendrick Lamar.  My musical roots began to rise once more and fill the hole in my self that needed passion.
Now, I’m moving on to bigger and better things.  College helped me reinvent myself.  High school limited my dreams as the only focus the district had in mind for me was graduating, and not having much arts in the process.  Never lose your passion.  Losing my interest in music created a void in my life, and it took me some time to realize what I once did at a young age was what I wanted to do until my old age: music.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

The Human Machine



The Human Machine
Automated robots in a nursery home, jets flying in the atmosphere without a pilot, and even robot assembly lines creating robots.  This all seems like the next installment of Terminator, but in reality it is already here in our lives.  We have seen an increasingly amount of technology come out in the past 50 years that has never been seen before.  We can now replace a dead limb with machines that help us regain our senses in lost regions of the body.  Before, if a loved one left the country on a business venture, we would have to wait for their return to see them.  Today, we have phones that allow us to have a video chat no matter where in the world you are.  Just a couple of years back people were still using brooms to sweep the floor of their house.  Now, we have Roomba’s, little automated machines that can do this work for us.  On one hand this has made cleaning up the house a lot easier, but has it also made us lazy?  Has life been replaced by these cold, steel-like machines that we value so much in our lives?  Or are we just in fear of them becoming self-aware just as in the film I, Robot?  Although technology has helped us create these machines that help prolong human life while also making it easier, these same advancements have led humanity to live in an overpopulated, lazy, and lifeless world.
The benefits that machine’s have brought to humanity are readily apparent as it has greatly increased the chance of one’s survival.  From simple microwaves preparing a frozen dinner for us to giant purifiers cleaning the water supply.  Machines have benefited us all in one way or another.  Artificial limbs could help replace a wounded soldier’s arm, giving him a second chance of holding his baby in his arms.  To further aid soldiers in combat, machines are being produced that will someday replace the soldier to greatly reduce casualties of war.  In the workplace, machines have made the workplace a safer place to be in as they can reach places us humans can’t or do extraordinary tasks that our bodies will not allow us to accomplish.  For example, crawl into a tiny hole to help look for survivors after a natural disaster.  Even automobile technology has lowered the chances of bumper-to-bumper accidents by allowing vehicles to park themselves.  These machines are becoming more lifelike as the years go by and are reaching peaks only imagined by science fiction writers.  Machines are being utilized in nursing homes to help take care of the elderly not just by caring for them, but also by providing the comfort of another individual.  Essentially removing humans from the picture.
In the words of the great Albert Einstein, “It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity.”  With all these innovations that have helped advance human life, we have dumbed down society to a certain extent.  Great advances in technology does not necessarily mean we have evolved as a species.  Especially when these advancements are nothing more but a means to show off a status. For example, Apple comes out with a new product almost every six months and all that is added is a one point megapixel camera upgrade from the previous model.  Most of these upgrades aren’t needed yet we find a need for them. 
Having machines do most of the work for us has made most people lazy.  One can simply go online to purchase groceries and have it delivered to their homes.  More and more technology is being created that makes us stay at home because there is no need to go outside.  Instead of traveling to a nearby hill or mountain for a hike, video game sensors allow people to simply turn on their television and do physical movements in place to simulate a hike or workout.  Some can argue that to an extent you are still reaching peak physical activity.  Yet, you won’t feel the same incline of a mountain or the changing steepness of a hill as well as the reduced oxygen that helps expand your lung capacity.  In the film Wall-E (2008), “Operation Cleanup” is put in place as we have practically destroyed the planet.  With the company BnL(Big & Large), the population has grown extremely fat and obsessed with shopping for the latest gear, all while living away from the planet. The robots in the film do all the work for society, even raise the babies.  Machines today have already began taking our place as parents.  Handheld devices and even the latest toys distract children for hours on end leaving parents with the freedom to kickback and relax.  Games on these devices as well as consoles hook children into staying indoors to play rather than be outside in the sunlight and exercise their young muscles.  Ultimately becoming drones stuck in a virtual world.
While machines have helped prolong our life, we have created a new problem, overpopulation.  In the trailer for the film Surrogates (2009), it is said “Become anyone you would like to be from the comfort of your home.”  While in hindsight this seems like fun and games, people do not realize the implications this would cause.  The population will safely be indoors and continue to grow while able to live another life outside of the home.  Leading to issues globally from housing to food supplies.  The more people that are on this earth, the faster natural resources fade away.  We are already in a global fuel crisis and adding more people to the equation means a faster depletion of these resources.  Tensions will grow as people have an increasing need for supplies.  With an increased population, and machines running things day to day, people will be left unemployed.  Stuck at home with nothing to do as machines would complete every task imaginable, machines will get a sense of life.
The fear told in many science fiction films is becoming more apparent as advances have helped give robots a human-like appearance.  In the film, I Robot (2004) it is said “A robot cannot harm a human being.”  For a machine to be able to harm a person, something must have triggered it because machines aren’t allowed to think for themselves.  We are giving machines a more human-like appearance with every new invention brought up.  We’re in the time were we can ask our phone a question and it would respond to us instantly.  Robots in Japan are continuing to evolve by having faster and smoother movements as well as facial expressions that only we has humans could do.  Machines continue to do the work for us while we just sit at home. The film Terminator depicts machines in a stage were they have become “self-aware” and essentially take over the world in an effort to destroy the human race.  These fears brought on by films have been around for years and as new machines are being created, people are realizing that there might be some truth behind this.
Machines are leading humans to a lazy existence in an overpopulated world filed with human-like machines.  People need to start living more and not let machines run their lives for them.  Sure it makes life easier, but at what cost? We need to keep this planet in our hands and not let machines run it.  Just as Elbert Hubbard once said, “One machine can do the work of 50 ordinary men.  No machine can do the work of one extraordinary man.”  Be extraordinary.



Works Cited
I Robot. Dir. Alex Proyas. Perf. Will Smith, Bridget Moynahan, and Bruce Greenwood. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation, 2004. Film.
Surrogates. Dir. Jonathan Mostow. Perf. Bruce Willis, Radha Mitchell, and Ving Rhames. Touchstone Pictures, 2009. Film.
Wall-E. Dir. Andrew Stanton. Perf. Ben Burtt, Elissa Knight, and Jeff Garlin. Pixar Animation Studios, 2008. Film.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

The Experience Machine


After reading “The Experience Machine” by Harvard philosopher Robert Nozick,  I believe that this machine is essentially what people today want.  What this machine would allow is for people to plug in neurologically and set their life for the next two years.  Afterwards, one would have either ten minutes or ten hours to set their next two years in motion.  All experiences will be pre ordained.  Essentially, you would only be living in your mind.  This is not something I would do.  Sure it would be nice to use for a day or two, to fulfill a fantasy not easily accomplished, such as that of a hero in a movie.  But to essentially live your life in this machine, with everything going just as you planned leaves out actual life.  Experiences aren’t mean to be set in motion by your will, but rather experienced as the days go by.  This is what makes us human, to live in the moment and to adapt to any change.  While being in this machine, theoretically, you wouldn’t know it and believe it to be all real.  Yet, once you awake from the two years, wouldn’t you see your life has been a lie?  You’re not really living, just dreaming.  Stuck in this world that you made for yourself were nothing could go wrong.  If you were to suddenly unplug, you would be lost.  This is definitely something I would not like to experience.  I love life, for better or worse.  This is where we can feel things that matter to us, change the future, and become someone great.  Wouldn’t it be better to give birth to a child in reality rather than just in your mind?  Living for the benefit of society is what should matter to us.  Bettering not just yourself but everyone around you brings a sense of fulfillment. 

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Can You Hear Me Now? Believe/Doubt/Author Q's

Believe
"The culture that grows up around the cell phone is a communications culture, but it is not necessarily a culture of self-relection."  I agree with the author that today's culture relies on cell phones for communication.  Everywhere I go I see people, both young and old, stuck on their phones as they go on their daily routine.  Their entire life seems to be in this virtual world rather than being in the real world to enjoy the REAL things around. When the author talked to a television producer she revealed to him, "When my Palm crashed it was like death.  It was more than I could handle.  I felt as though I had lost my mind."  I have experienced this, the first two times I broke my phone.  It sucks.  It hurts.  I felt lost.  I wasn't sure of myself on what to do with this extra time as I couldn't text anyone.  Eventually I realized that my life hadn't always revolved around a phone.  Once people realize how life was before all these technological advances, we may live happier more fulfilling lives. Be better humans.

Doubt
Like in previous articles, it was hard to doubt anything said by the author as he shares the same point of view as me. One of the few things I would like to know is where urban children were left to explore the city between ages 12-14.  When my parents lived in Mexico, they were always out and about as they lived in small towns were everybody knew each other.  Yet, I'm not so sure how this would be in urban cities such as Los Angeles.  Also, not everybody is as hooked to their phone like the television producer was.  I know of people who still don't own a cell phone, partially because they can't afford it.  Still though, they live there life just as anybody else would and don't seem sad at all.

Questions
What I want to know from the author is: How stuck are you with your media devices, such as a cell phone?  Ever gone without it for a month, or more?  If so, how was the experience?  Would you relate to the producer who suffered as if a part of her was taken away?

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Media Overload


In the article “Media Overload,” Stephen Collinson tracks the rapid growth of media consumption in society.  According to Collinson, the average American consumes around nine hours a day watching television, surfing the web, or using their mobile phones.  On average, people get about eight hours of sleep, add those nine hours and you got yourself 17 hours of the day planned already.  Leaving out seven hours for who knows what.  Maybe work?  If that is the case, the only human interaction you will get is with your co-workers who maybe a select few are part of your social network.  Collinson wrote, “some exerts question whether as consumers are swamped by information, they lose the ability to decipher fact from rumour, or find it hard to thing through what they hear.”  Today’s media focuses on getting news out as fast as possible and most of the time they have malicious facts.  They have a 24 hour deadline to release news out and with the rushing of news, it is hard to figure out what is factual and what is not. To make matters worse, every top news network would report the same story, so if one got it wrong, they all got it wrong leaving the public to me malinformed.  Collinson also wrote, “Google has announced a proposal for free wireless internet access for the whole of San Francisco...”   This to me was surprising as I didn’t expect an entire city to allow this.  Mainly because of the budget crisis and the amount of materials needed but Google being a big private company might have the funds to do it.  Still though, I’m not quite sure how this would affect society. I can only guess that it would definitely lower the amount of spending on the web as it will be free.  Yet, now you are allowing people to be stuck in this world.  It would be San Google, not San Francisco.