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Technology Crisis

Essay by   •  February 19, 2011  •  Essay  •  391 Words (2 Pages)  •  908 Views

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The excessive use of computer software and other similar technology has significantly reduced our overall appreciation for manual work and encouraged temptations towards procrastination and general inactivity. Some of us are unfamiliar with a collection of paper backed substance commonly referred to as a book. Back in my parent’s time, books were utilized as the feature research tools. Today, they are frequently forgotten as valid sources of information because of the widely-available internet network. Whatever happened to home-made cards and long old-fashioned letters? Are pre-made e-cards and simple e-mails genuinely sufficient replacements? Some would say that instant messaging has considerably advanced methods of communication, - but has it really? Text-messaging and other such contemporary tools fall short of intimate face-to-face conversations and avoid personal confrontations. Video games, a feature entertainment source, follows similar suit: it has made society more secular and provides a very poor depiction of virtual reality. Why pretend to play basketball? Enjoy the authentic thrill and enjoyment of truly playing the sport. Technology has replaced in many cases, the necessity to think and reason.

Easy accessibility, to varied information, such as online services, allows for convenience that eliminates challenges and difficult labour. The consequential feeling of accomplishment and fulfilment is being displaced by apathy and indifference at an alarming rate вЂ" there is no longer appreciation for raw exertion. The remote control offers another classic example our defeat to technology. For some reason, people find it immensely more satisfying to push the small grey button on their remote control in order to monitor television functions, instead of merely walking to the television set themselves, even if it takes them a half hour to find the little sucker in the first place! (It’s probably secretly laughing at our sense of rationality!) The remote control also results in indecision simply because of the selection it provides resulting in hours in front of the television flipping from channel to channel, only to enjoy ten to fifteen minutes of a programme. Similar automatic devices such as automatic garage openers or gate openers encourage idle and passive tendencies accurately mimicking the lifestyle of a sloth (a feasible close relative or shared ancestor?). Perhaps, the world of “The

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