Search Helium

Home > Computers & Technology > Computers & Technology (Other)

Has society become controlled by technology?

Results so far:

Yes
74% 1563 votes Total: 2111 votes
No
26% 548 votes

Yes

by Kayci Roert

Created on: April 16, 2009

To answer the question of a technological takeover first look at yourself. Do you own a computer? A cell phone? An IPod? When was the last time you went a full 24 hour period without making contact with another person but what's now known as snail mail or quite simply by driving to their house, dropping in and saying hello?

The news channels have stopped reporting news, instead you are told" for more information, log onto our website"Try to apply for a loan, again, I am referred to a website rather than an actual human being. Technology has made personal interaction practically obsolete. No longer do we have to speak to a representative if we have a problem with anything in our household. If you're involved in a car accident you can simple log on or make a call to an automated service that will gladly take your information. Why make a trip to the library to enjoy the smell of a hundred years worth of old books? Everything you need is right at your fingertips. Book report due? Not only do you never have to read the book, if you have enough money you can log on and pay someone to write it for you?

Statistics state that over 70% of the world owns at least one computer and that over 85% percent own a cellphone. This is not including devices used at work or all the different variations of the Blackberry.

I was a child of the eighties when the best technology we had was a microwave. I do not feel as though I was deprived in any way but not being able to text my friends when I wanted to chat with them. I derived immense pleasure by being in the same room with both friends and family.

Our childrens writing skills are plummeting faster than a bomb from the sky. What reason do they have to work on penmanship, they can type can't they? Reading, writing, arithmetic, didn't we all have this pounded into our brains growing up? Reading is no longer an issue. You can simply download a program to red that book to you. Writing, hire a transcript service and all your words will magically appear in your next email. Who needs math, if you can't work an online calculator, you can Google someone to do the work for you.

You could effectively bring America to its knees by taking out the satellites that run this country. You could stop gas pumps from working, banks from being able to process funds, you can even keep doors from opening.

Technology effects practically every aspect of our day to day lives and I for one think it's a crying shame.

Learn more about this author, Kayci Roert.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.

No

by Tim Gray

Created on: September 23, 2008

Computers took our society, and many others the world over, by storm during the late 1980's and 1990's. By the beginning of the millennium, they had virtually become as common a household item as a TV or telephone. Moreover, their popularity and usefulness only continue to grow, and the day is coming when all banking, bill paying and other critical financial elements of everyone's lives will be consummated by way of the personal computer. There is no stopping it. It's useful applications in the lives of all people cannot be overstated, and its ability to help a consumer negotiate his or her way through a plethora of essential functions will only continue to grow by leaps and bounds, as time marches on.

However, with regard to whether or not our society is being controlled by them, I will argue that it is not. Personal and business computers, for that matter, are natural byproducts of technology that is carrying out and fulfilling its own evolutionary course. Just as with so many other human appliances and inventions, the computer is without certainty playing out the role it was intended to assume. Evolutionary technology cannot be changed, altered or redirected down any path other than the one it is meant to take. Computers have become one of the most integrally important segments of the recent manifestation in technological evolution. They are here to stay. Moreover, their place in a technological world will only become more and more firmly entrenched, as time advances. The cost alone has made them so affordable, that only those resistant to technical advancement remain outside the computer consumer loop.

Computers, like all technological advances, have their liabilities. Hackers, authors of viruses and other ill intended techno-intelligent deviants can wreak havoc on the personal information one stores on his or her computer. Exercising a great deal of fastidious discretion is important for the consumer, whom has grown computer dependent. Firewalls, anti-spyware, anti-virus and anti-spam programs go a long way toward keeping the computer literate from being harmed, but the internet is so vast, almost to the point of seeming infinite, that it may be very difficult to keep consumers safe, at all times.

In closing, one needn't feel computers are a threat to society. They are a natural consequence of an industrial revolution that was established many, many years ago. The intention of the industrial revolution was to generate goods and products that complete time consuming human tasks, that otherwise would be large hardships and tremendously burdensome.

Evolution takes many shapes. It certainly has played a critical part in the development of homo sapiens, and there is an equally critically important part evolution has played in the creature comfort devices most people covet greatly. The computer will remain a part of mankind into perpetuity and its place in society will only grow in greater and greater importance across the years ahead.

Learn more about this author, Tim Gray.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.


CONNECT WITH US

Read
our blog
Helum for writers

Write and get published
Share with other writers
Polish your freelancing skills

Join our active writing community
Helium Content Source for Publishers

Quality articles from proven freelancers
Exclusive rights, fast turnaround
Brand engagement, business blogging -- our writers do it all

Get custom content today!

INFORMATION


Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA