![]() |
The Delicate Balance of Alone Time - Printable Version +- Forums (https://www.babeltechreviews.com/community) +-- Forum: BabelTechReviews (https://www.babeltechreviews.com/community/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Forum: Everything BabelTech Related (https://www.babeltechreviews.com/community/forumdisplay.php?fid=14) +--- Thread: The Delicate Balance of Alone Time (/showthread.php?tid=250) |
The Delicate Balance of Alone Time - BabelTech - 06-27-2015 CLICK HERE TO SEE THIS POST ON THE MAIN SITE Delicate Balance Between Connecting, Being Connected[caption id="attachment_1406" align="aligncenter" width="436"] ![]() In a way, it’s a great time to be alive. With some effort, you can reach out and find out about anything you’re thinking about; you can research and become an “instant” expert on any subject; you can choose from a world of entertainment; and with a little bit of patience, you can connect with virtually any of the 7B plus people on the planet. Better yet, we can share that information, knowledge, entertainment and experiences with the virtual world. Heck, not long ago, I saw a woman snap a foodie with her iPhone of a Bubba Burger! Mobile smartphones, tablets, laptops and the Internet have let us blur the lines between work and our personal life. You can connect with and entertain, inform, irritate and hurt people you know and don’t know 24/7. The EFF (Electronic Frontier Foundation) has determined that communications is a right not a privilege; so you have a right to tell us what you’re eating, reading, watching, what you’re doing and how you’re feeling even if no one gives a rat’s ***! Cameras, sensors in phones, public spaces, devices have become so ubiquitous people feel empowered to share … everything. The Hospital Administrator added, “Wonderful what we can do nowdays.”
Google, which doesn’t like the way Facebook is stealing ad/click dollars, has its own approach to improving the world (and the use of Android) with its fiber and wireless activity. Obviously, their goals are to improve life for all of humanity. And if they just happen to make a little profit in the process, who’s hurt? Connectivity (hence devices) is expanding as rapidly as possible. To the delight of Apple, Samsung and the others, the demand shows no sign of abating as people become connected.
While you and I enjoy the power and flexibility of our smart devices, companies (hardware and software) see a tremendous opportunity by reaching new customers in poorer countries such as Asia, Africa and Latin America with low-cost connectivity devices. Both Google and Facebook (and others) are rushing to deliver simplified phones that provide people with services such as email, search and social networking at little or no cost. The uber-connectivity will ultimately lead to technology being so seamlessly integrated into our lives that it effectively disappears. Already, Gen Zers (children who are almost born with devices in their hands) have quickly led the way to a feeling of “well, that’s the way the world works.”
They’ve become the means for people to tap into and use the collective intelligence with the Internet. Of course, as with anything we have/use, there is always a down side/tradeoff. Along the way (without most people thinking too much about it), the devices and communications networks capture, store and manipulate data and meta data about well, just about everything. Exec #5 commented, “Souls don't develop because people become distracted...” This hasn’t gone unnoticed by the commercial and government sectors which understand the predictive power of data analysis. Organizations like EFF and civil/civilian rights organizations have given rise to demands for all sectors to be more open in their disclosures. Organizations like Appthority, an app risk management firm, regularly report that nearly 90 percent of the apps exhibit what they call “risky behavior.” That phrase may sound worse than you might think because some of the actions you might actually want and find useful -- location tracking, accessing your contacts and/or your calendar. Of course, that also means sharing your data with third-parties like ad networks. But even then, if the ads, coupons and offers are tailored enough for you, you might find the “service” useful. Paid or free, the apps share more information than you think, which concerns some folks.
While people scream and holler about the way “they” filter, censor, track their every activity, I see very few – especially with Gen Zers, simply shutting the devices down. That’s one of the reasons it is estimated that the average person sees 3,000 – 5,000 ads a day, a significant jump in the volume compared to a few years ago. And most research shows that the number you actually see (those that register) hasn’t increased that much and perhaps has even decreased slightly. Mrs. Hendry observed, “I don't think she writes her own material.” Meanwhile, businesses struggle to devise new, better ways of having their messages register and encourage engagement.
That might be why Arianna Huffington, CEO of HuffPost, said on Jon Stewart’s Daily Show earlier this year that 20 percent of Americans use their phones during sex! Harry Blackitt heard that and said, “That's not the point. We could have it any time we wanted.” Talk about multi-tasking. Talk about sharing! Hell, I have a tough time getting Siri to call a number while driving and they’re… Michael Harris, author of The End of Absence, made the point that our lives lack solitude and instead of periodically shutting off, shutting down the devices to daydream, we fill the awkward silence with social media. Going cold turkey like that is a little more than I’m willing to face; but there has to be a healthy balance between taking advantage of our technological ability to reach and be reached and our constant need to email, Facebook like, YouTube post and retweet to break away from group think.
Letting the device vibrate in your pocket during dinner is much better than a Bubba Burger foodie. Leaving the unit in the kitchen (turned off to save battery) is better for things that happen in the bedroom like … sleep. ![]() # # # |