We find ourselves in the paradoxical situation that the more we call "that which bcomes known" by the name "reality," the further we distance ourselves from it. Because with time and increasingly sophisticated tools, reality seems more and more intelligible.
Scientific practice was based on a kind of rugged, hands-on experimentation but we
learn to link them tightly with this thing called "the real", to think of them as unbreakable and natural linksto an absolute experience of physical phenomena.
When digital media technologies connect or separate people, they become media.
Technologies embody social, political, cultural, economic and philosophical ideas and relationships.
Method that generate a useful critique of this moment is raised within that mighty architecture and so steeped in it that not only is it invisivle but we view with deep suspicion or outright derision ways of circumventing or fracturing its hegemony.
Cyberspace doesn't turn out to be merely a distraction, an enery drain that turns our focus away from deeper changes in the working of capital, information and thought.
The simple point of all this is that it's up to us. We can pay attention or allow ourseelves to be distracted.Questions about whether cyberculture will be individually, is willing to contribute.
Regardless of how we tell those sotries, what we seem to learn from observation is that human civilization proceeds not by neat, smooth advances but by a collection of patches and workarounds.
AS WE MAY THINK
Published in 1945 in the Atlantic Monthly Vannevar Bush's description of an
imaginary personal information machine in his article "As We May Think" had and immediat e impact. Vannevar Bush's description in 1945 of an imaginary information machine, the "Memex", is constantly viewed and cited in reltion to subsequent developments in computing,
information retrieval, and hypertext.
And here, what is the Memex?? The Memex was based on Bush's work during 1938-1940 developing an improved photoelectric microfilm selector.
Then, what is a microfilm selector? Photoelectric microfilm selector is an electronic retrieval technology pioneered by Emanuel Goldberg (see the optional reading by Michael Buckland).
Read above my thoughts
After I read "Welcome to the present" , I think about computer graphics again,
Usually, I like watching movies and enjoy handling graphic tools. and that makes me happy. And I'm here. - Global Media-I think to, even from us and it awakes a petty compared to fixed idea and there is a possibility of doing an originality thought and that, it sees