About a week ago, I downloaded Need For Speed: Most Wanted on my new Moto X. Its impressive graphics
and intuitive controls startled me. The computer I owned nearly a decade ago
would have struggled to render this game in real time. And I am running this
smoothly on my smartphone. Now, this NFS franchise, with other phone-related
queries, fill my time once spent in thought and contemplation. Now, I schedule
time for contemplation. My smartphone nearly attracts more attention than my
own creative ideas can. Notifications from friends, apps, and games seemingly shine
more brilliantly than my somewhat dull and partially-developed ideas. As I gaze
into the future, I wonder whether my phone will want to relieve my burden of personal
thought. My idea fades, as Need For
Speed: Most Wanted sent me a notification to play it some more.
References:
Oaks, "Focus and Priorities" (Ensign, May 2001)
Postman, "Five Things We Need to Know About Technological Change"
Thursday, September 12, 2013
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2 comments:
Hmmm. Does NFS speed up or slow down your thoughts?
NFS has trained me to think faster. Not necessarily good, as real life runs at a different pace.
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