Thursday, December 5, 2013

Life With the Camera Phone


One piece of technology that has affected the human experience is the invention and popularity of the camera within the cell phone. It seems as though almost everyone in America is ready and able to snap a picture or film a short video clip at any given moment.        
This new age, where everyone has a camera at all times, is very interesting because it has such positive and such negative consequences. For the good, always having a camera can allow you to capture all kinds of beautiful moments that you may miss otherwise. Anything from a surprise birthday party to a backyard stunt, or my personal favorite, sunsets.  

                                       (Photos I took with my camera phone)
On the other hand, because of cell phone cameras, it is much harder to get away with doing stupid stuff under the radar. Who knows how many job opportunities have been lost due to something that surfaced on social media after being immortalized by the cell phone. I know I myself have received a few phone calls from my mother demanding that I remove pictures of myself that other people have posted to my facebook.
            Guys like Daniel Tosh and Rob Dyrdek don’t know how easy they’ve got it. Back when Bob Sagett was running America’s Funniest Home Videos, you couldn’t just carry your camcorder in your pocket and then instantly send it in. Oh no, you’d have to film it on some huge, low quality, expensive piece of equipment and then send in a physical tape through the postal service.
            Camera phones haven’t just changed the way we entertain ourselves, they’ve changed the way we communicate, half the time I receive a text message it is a picture message and don’t even get me started about snapchat.
            

Thursday, October 24, 2013

More on the GoPro

I would write more about how awesome this little guy is but I think the video of what I got this weekend while it was strapped to my dive mask would better explain.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umcHH2WyhLQ

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Fantasy Football

One medium through which my friends and I like to socialize and compete/ talk lots of trash is fantasy football. Now fantasy is pretty darn high tech. There are tons of different formats with computer based drafting, trades, waver wires, and so on. I get live feeds on which of my players are injured or how many points there getting this week as well as if they are in any legal trouble or have any other extrafootball issues going on. Playing fantasy football is a fun way to stay in touch with the ongoings of the NFL as well as good friends.

Monday, October 14, 2013

Technology Causing ADHD?



Attention-deficite hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)- A condition that affects the areas of the brain that help us to control impulses, concentrate, and organize. according to: http://www.quillivantxr.com/understanding-adhd?. People my age probably have more peers diagnosed with this disorder than peers not diagnosed. Is technology partially to blame? Are the video games, reality shows, and HBO jaw droppers to blame for our hyperactive generation? According to studies, children who spent two or more hours in front of a screen daily were more that twice as likely to develop ADHD that children who spent less time in front of the screen. http://www.everydayhealth.com/adhd-awareness/does-technology-cause-adhd.aspx The cause, overstimulation. How can a child overexposed to video games where every second is action packed and full of intense situations be expected to sit and focus on a grammar lecture? Proportionally, it is a fact that higher rates of technology influence on children is occurring at the same time as higher rates of adolescent ADHD. When you think about it, it's really no surprise that these kids are masters at Gand Theft Auto but they cant sit through an hour history lecture.

Critical Thinking

Critical thinking or CT is such an important and apparently well studied area of interest. After being publicly shamed into reading Dr. Peckham's chapter on critical thinking, my understanding of critical thinking and its evolution was really broadened. First, the importance of critical thinking. The ability to think critically is necessary for the sustainable growth of humanity, one example being the emancipation of slaves in America. This is an example of social critical thinking when the early American people contested the accepted political and social norm of slavery by thinking critically and doing the right thing. What I found interesting is how many writers throughout history have contemplated and written on the idea of critical thinking and how the concept of this thought has evolved into a truly enlightened discipline of thought. From how I interpreted the chapter, the Idea of critical thinking has evolved into the idea that critical thinking is field-dependent such that a single method for universal CT would be ridiculous.

I also did not realize how much modern day teachers considered and worked to teach CT in their lesson plans. Not only is there a huge desire among teachers to teach CT, the desire also exists to teach class-specific CT so as to maximize the student's ability to think critically and thus further the advancement of humanity. I believe that the art of CT has never been as important as it is today with all the BS in media and on the internet constantly streaming into our young brains. I am going to try and figure out a way to attach Dr. Peckham's chapter on Critical thinking to this post for the interested and aggressive reader.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

High Tech Soldier Safety





The human race is always involved in war. Since the times of Alexander the Great, technological advancements have been utilized to maximize destruction and thus allow for more conquering. Since old Alex, humans have come a long way, becoming more and more efficient at killing each other with the help of technology. But how is technology helping protect those who serve to protect our freedom today? One of the newest soldier safety projects that the military is working on revolves around new types of vests called STF (Shear Thickening Fluid) body armor. The key to this new idea is the hard nano particles of silica suspended in the polyethelene glycol liquid. This solution is then used to soak fabric like kevlar which is sewn together into vests and helmet covers. This new armor is lighter that other armors and it is very flexible until the time of contact with a bullet or fragmentation from a grenade or IED when it becomes extremely rigid and impenetrable. Thanks to highly specialized machines and lab techniques, the synthesis of this new lifesaving compound is possible. Thanks technology! Read more about the advancement of STF at  http://usmilitary.about.com/cs/armyweapons/a/liquidarmor.htm

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Some Thoughts





How much longer will the human race study to memorize? How much longer will places like Middleton library be jam packed with stressed out, coffee filled youngsters staring into books and computer screens? At the rate of which internet access is progressing, why should we internalize facts and dates when we can just ask Siri on the spot? Computers are just huge brains that regurgitate the information that humans would otherwise have to memorize. If we afford to spend less time memorizing, would we be able to better develop our affinity for critical thinking and for understanding each other?  If this theory holds any validity, humanity could really evolve and become more advanced.