by admin | May 22, 2015 10:08 am
In the course of a day recently, I did the following:
No, I did not read the book on a Kindle or another electronic device. I held a hardback copy in my hands and flipped actual pages. It was a refreshing change after an entire day spent peering at one type of electronic screen or another, no sound except for the ceiling fan whirring and Rosie the Wonder Dog softly snoring on the sofa.
I appreciate and enjoy electronic stuff. Growing up, I built crystal radios and eventually worked up to an actual radio, soldering transistors and capacitors per the instructions. I bought my first computer in 1983, and upgraded the next year with the very first model of an Apple Macintosh. It had a nine-inch screen, no hard drive and sold for $2,500. I have lost count of how many Macs I have owned since then, but the 27-inch iMac sitting in my study costs a few hundred bucks less than that original model did — with thousands times more computing power.
In, the 1980s, I also bought a Radio Shack TRS-80, forever known in newsrooms as Trash-80s. It was a laptop with a single-line display and not a lot of memory. But it served me well as I did research in libraries to finish writing a long-delayed master’s thesis. Then I discovered CompuServe, the first commercial online news service and eagerly subscribed.
This has the potential to change the media landscape, I thought at the time. Some folks will enjoy getting their news 24/7 and not having to wait for the paper to land in the driveway — or be held captive to the nightly network news. I had no idea the revolution would change modern culture so completely. There is now an entire generation of folks under the age of 25 or so who cannot imagine a world without an Internet or cell phones.
When I taught mass communications at Kilgore College last year, one day the class of 30 young people looked at me as if I had just landed from Mars. I told them that not long before they were born, if you wanted to find out what year, for example, the Lusitania was sunk, you either had to look it up in an encyclopedia (if your parents had invested in a set, paid with the installment plan), or go to the library and look it up in a reference book. Or, if you had gotten chummy with a reference librarian — and all savvy journalists knew to do so — then you could call and get the librarian to look up the information. (The Lusitania sank May 7, 1915, if you’re wondering, torpedoed by a German U-boat.)
The information explosion made possible by the Internet, the World Wide Web, Google and its competitors represents the greatest advancement since the invention of the Gutenberg press. The printing press made it possible to reproduce books and other material in mass quantities, which led to the widespread dissemination of knowledge. Now, a universe of knowledge is at our fingertips.
Sometimes though, it sure is nice to shut down all those screens, put the phone on vibrate and curl up with a well-researched and written book of history. I don’t plan to ever give up that habit.
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