Can We Find A Balance With Technology & Us
Jul 12th, 2008 | By Steven Hodson | Category: Technology, The Social Web, The Web
Yesterday I wrote a post over at Mashable called Is the Internet Destroying Real World Interactions? In the post I wondered about the impact that technology is taking on our lives and if we weren’t in the end missing out by being more concentrated on technological solutions rather than being able to appreciate the more human interactions. What was interesting was the reaction by way of the comments to the post itself and on FriendFeed.
Much of the reaction on Mashable to the post was for the part in agreement with the sentiment of the post. On FriendFeed however the reaction couldn’t have been more opposite with most people not seeing anything wrong with this increase in digital interaction instead of human interaction. In some ways this really shouldn’t be all that surprising considering the fact that the demographics of the FriendFeed users are probably those that are heavy into technology already. With Mashable this would probably be more of a level ground of different types of readers.
This raises an interesting question though that I have been thinking about since writing that post and following the two different types of comments being made. That being - considering the fact that the extremely large percentage of kids growing up at this point have never known a world without the Internet can they even grasp the importance of the human aspect of communication. When all you have had is text messaging between people standing right next to you instead of looking them in the face and actually speaking more than empty platitudes how can you have an understanding of how important real intimacy of verbal communication is.
In some ways I am almost reaching the point where I feel lucky that I grew up in a time before the Internet. It is like that is giving me an advantage in dealing with the world that I wonder the younger generation will have. As we move to more and more online interaction being accepted as the norm will this younger generation be able to deal with real face to face communications that are a level above just day to day chatter.
Some might say that the benefits of this modern way of communicate far outweigh any loss of real personal interaction but I seriously wonder if any possible benefit is really a trade off worth making.
What do you think?
Add New Comment
Thanks. Your comment is awaiting approval by a moderator.
Do you already have an account? Log in and claim this comment.
Add New Comment
Trackbacks