• wikipedia believer

    Support Wikipedia

Book review: The shallows- what the internet is doing to our brains

I finished this book on the flight to Istanbul today. The book is a continuation of an article from the Atlantic called “Is Google making us stupid? What the Internet is doing to our brains”. I never read that article though I think I heard about it a while ago. If you are one of those who cannot go one hour without checking your email, or you use Twitter a lot, or if it is a long time ago since you finished reading a book, maybe you should read this book (or maybe you shouldn’t. I don’t know).

The book’s argument is something I suspected for some time. What it says is that you most probably will not finish reading this blog because it is too long for your twisted stressed shallow brain. You will scan the text for some words and will click on the next link (maybe you already clicked on the one from the Atlantic and disappeared from my blog?). Carr argues that the internet is changing our brain (to the worse in his view) because of its hyperlinked form and fast pace. It is strange because I remember hypertext was created by researchers claiming it was structured according to how our brains worked.

The book starts with the argument that all technology we use changes us as humans. Then it goes on discussing in depth how computers change us. Interesting is the discussion of technologies that help us create new abstractions of reality (clock, map and books are examples) as opposed to technologies that change the physical world (like bridges, trucks, guns). Internet is an abstraction technology in the same way as writing and books.

I liked the book’s discussion of Google’s business model, of ELIZA and AI, the discussion of memory (artificial and human), and in general the philosophical discussions about technology. I also liked (and made sad) by his discussion of how technology affects our human traits like compassion and empathy (just look at the ongoing use of drones by US. I bet American public does not care about them). But I cannot say I totally agree with the author about how bad the internet is. I am sure Carr would have spent ten years or more writing this book if he did not have access to the internet. Carr is also often romantic and is sad about the loss of things that probably never had a meaning (like cursive handwriting that will most probably disappear because we write using computer keyboards. Who cares?). The book is highly recommended, especially for technocrats like myself.

Posted in Book reviews | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Book review: Eating Animals

What do we teach our kids while we raise them? In two words: double standards. We call them compromises, but in reality we are talking about double standards. The story of the book “Eating Animals” by Jonathan Safran Foer is a good example. I got the book as a gift for my birthday this year from my daughter (recommended by my wife). My daughter is ten years old and has been vegetarian for almost a year already. She got the idea of becoming a vegetarian after she saw a dead rabbit in a shop in a market in Barcelona. She had two rabbit pets at that time. She gave the idea some thought (around half a year) and then decided to become vegetarian. She stopped eating what she liked the most.

For us grown-ups it does not work like this. We tell to ourselves: “I don’t want to think about it. Don’t tell me these awful things about how animals are treated. I don’t want to hear!” And then we go on eating animals even we know what the animals go through before then end up in our plate. We do the same for every thing we do (“Oh don’t tell me about hungry kids in Africa! Let me eat my dinner in peace!”). We are a race of double standards. But not our kids (as long as they stay kids).

Back to the book. The good thing about this book is of course that it makes you think about what you eat, specially if what you eat involves animals with a feeling of pain (almost all animals and fish). Then the author asks the question: “When you know you can make the choice and stop eating animals, how does it make you feel when you don’t make that choice?” The book is mainly about factory farming practices in the USA. And these practices are spreading around the world and into huge emerging markets such as China and India. It is a sad book to read specially if you have some love for animals.

I am proud of my daughter and I hope I will not teach her double standards.

Did I become a vegetarian after having read this book? No. But I don’t think the author intended me to become vegetarian. I try to eat much less meat than I used to. I also have double standards.

Posted in Book reviews | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Iran plans to send monkey into space

Iran has unveiled the next stage of its space programme, saying it is going to send a monkey into space next month.

via Iran plans to send monkey into space – Middle East – Al Jazeera English.

Posted in Iran | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Rapport om innovasjon i omsorgstjenesten – regjeringen.no

 

 

Utvalget som har utredet muligheter for bruk av ny teknologi i omsorgssektoren overleverer sin rapport til helse- og omsorgsminister Anne-Grete Strøm-Erichsen torsdag 16. juni. Næringsminister Trond Giske vil også være til stede.

via Rapport om innovasjon i omsorgstjenesten – regjeringen.no.

Posted in Ambient assisted living, Healthcare | Tagged | Leave a comment

Apple iCloud: Same old cage, new height • The Register

The problem with this vision, as Techdirt points out, is that cloud has simply become a new layer of lock-in, which Apple’s new iCloud service stresses with a vengeance.

We haven’t banished operating system lock-in, in other words. We’ve just renamed it “cloud.”

via Apple iCloud: Same old cage, new height • The Register.

Posted in ICT | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment