Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
English 231:New Media & Digital Culture: From the Printing Press to…
English 231:New Media & Digital Culture: From the Printing Press to Virtual Reality
Determinism
Determinist
Karl Marx
Ted Kryzanski
Unabomber
Technology is out of our control
Technology is forming itself
Social Shaping of Technology
We are shaping technology
appropriation
conversion
commodification
Our population as a whole is making
the technology improve more as we proceed
to the future
Meditation
breathing techniques
7,4,8
being aware, in touch with surroundings
stepping away from technology
Privacy Policies
Using Alexa's recordings
Doorbell cameras
Home security
Used against us?
FBI needing Apple passcode
security breech for law abiding citizens
Face ID, Touch ID
Mindfulness
Monkey business illusion: surroundings
People too involved in their devices
Activity where we left class to take a picture, came back and had to draw it, then look at how well our memory worked
Smartphone addiction
Moore's law
actual components of technology get smaller every year
smaller = more powerful
Kranzberg's Laws
Technology is neither good nor bad
Technology is neutral
Smartphone Paradox
Chapter 1: Introduction
Trigger. Behavior. Reward
condition of phone, accessories tell about you
wearable, implantable technology
separation, media multitasking, technological determinism
Chapter 2: A Brief History of the Smartphone
societal wants and needs
smartphone, cell phone, mobile phone
shorten replacement cycle, landlines
young generations and technology
Chapter 3: Habit-Making Decisions
guarded usage patterns and behaviors
addiction, smartphone dependency
tallying addictive behavirors
phone psychosis
Chapter 4: Use. Gratify. Repeat.
never fully satisfied
demands: food, entertainment, shopping, information, and education
change who we are
Chapter 5: Outsourcing Memory
writing improves memory
retaining/accessing information later
summaries vs reading all the given information
perceived knowing vs actual knowing
Chapter 6: Digital Societies
online connection- we lose deeper contact with ourselves and with others
friendliness/awkwardness; undesirable situations
"technoference"
digital self-representation
Chapter 7: Going Dark
potential privacy breech(FBI/Apple)
surveillance
technoself, boredom extinction
Chapter 8: Conclusion
Mindfulness
technology free areas, track usage, turn off notifications, etc.
child development with technology present
"They can connect us to everything and they can divorce us from everything. They deliver us to information and strip us of knowledge. They boost productivity and make us less productive."
Film Analysis
realist
themes
formalist
camera angles
character
setting
tones
flashbacks
contextualist
action/expression
Marvel App
Impacting the community in a positive way (CCU)
Designing your own app/Using a new website
New technologies
Clay Shriky
The internet makes you smarter
Nicholas Carr
The internet makes you dumber
Tools of the Mind
William Poundstone
The internet is making us meta-ignorant
Electrically Shocked
People would rather be electrically shocked than have to sit with out their devices
Larry Rosen
connecting virtually isn't the same as a real world experiance
Keith Hampton
connecting virtually is enhancing relationships, not replacing them
Her
Relationships with technology
Futuristic technology
Real world vs Virtual world
Google Feud
searching the internet
hashtags
Social Media
posting online for anyone to see
once online, can always be found
different appearances for different crowds (ex: work attire vs going out with friends)
Mindfulness Entries #1-8
Multitasking
Reading paper copy vs Digital reading
attention span
portable
pros/cons
obtaining information
Sherry Turkle
Connected, but Alone
Becoming the norm
Ex: Parents using technology at the dinner table
Friends hanging out, just to all be on their devices
No social interactions// connection only via device