2014年10月7日星期二

Separation, the Most Challenging Part of Ubiquitous Media

Having reviewed the topics we’ve been through, I tried to conclude the whole idea in the word ‘separation’. Though the mass media tell us about ‘Earth Village’ or how Internet and other computing technologies bring us together, we actually experience an opposite feeling. It’s not only about how interpersonal relationship has been reduced, but also about how the integrity of an individual’s mind and body is broken down, with the involvement of ubiquitous media.

Think of the surveillance technologies. The report about how citizens monitor each other still shocks me. It sounds like a plot in 1984, by George Orwell, but the truth is even harsher, with pervasive CCTV around the city and all the data collected from every citizen, and the check mechanism of online information. People then have to try their best to protect their privacy, cause everything could be collected and some day turns them in, and that’s how surveillance separate us.

Cloud, the Enclosure 3.0, is also an evidence of separation of interpersonal relationship. It’s kind of like monarchal social stratum. People are more involved in a relationship with official platforms with gigantic database, but less with other people.

Apart from the foregoing separation of interpersonal relationship, with increasing digital technologies in our life, smart phones, wearable devices, we may foresee a possibly separation of mind and body. Think of the concept of brain in a vat proposed by Hilary Putman. We are actually facing with the similar situation. In a near future, we may stop writing or typing anything because computers will generate our ideas. We don’t walk, we don’t go to work, and we don’t have parties. And then those pragmatists may claim that our physical bodies are no longer useful, but a waste of resources. We surely could run the intelligent function well without legs and hands. Is human intimate relationship necessary? We can fall in love with computer programs anyway.  


To make a conclusion, separation is the most important reason I think ubiquitous media challenging, and perhaps the most profound influence it’s going to have on our social behaviors.

2014年10月5日星期日

Message is Everywhere

Message is everywhere. Walking on the street, looking around, you can see that people waste no space to convey their ideas. It is comforting to find some vivid tangible messages around us, when we gain most of our knowledge staring at our phones and laptops in this ubiquitous media era.  Some handwriting ones are even cuter. 


Logos on their vehicles, of course, and posters along the streets, for commercial purposes.



Those with less budgets, paste their ads on any plain stuff, wire pole, mailbox, bus station board... When people walk by, they may have a look of it. 


 Some notes are made in a mysterious way, that I can barely understand. But they do seem to serve some particular use.



 Sometimes people simply write down their feelings then.


Some walls are meant to be doodled!