And so the story goes that there has been about a 'freeing up' and overcoming of boundaries such as spatial and temporal confines. By foregrounding the ways in which we have and can gain access to Web 2.0, places such supposed freedoms into a completely new context. Instead we remain bound to and reliant upon some form of technological device, as well as (at least for a moment) a point of stasis. Which is ironic when you consider how the Internet has traditionally been viewed as separate from the flesh fleshy self. Certainly there are already lifestyles and professions that require that the individual must be in one place for a set period of time, but none that are also without the organic richness of embodied contact, skin, touch, smell…
And so an active and empowered digital technology user I’m wondering if there is room for a new kind of interface that offers a new kind of interactivity? The taken for granted processes to produce and reproduce; text, images and even voice content online serve as recognition that as users we have moved beyond passive consumers to empowered producers. Nevertheless at present we continue with the same sum of technological engagement: Screen + You = physically demanding. Perhaps time for a new seated position.
Another version of this post is published by Maz Hardey @ Girl Geekdom blog
3 comments:
I would say Screens + YOU.. as you could be in front of your laptop with many "windows" open while you're watching TV and looking who is calling you in the screen of your iPhone... A friend of mine, Carlos Tabernero, called this situation "Screen Wars". So How do you choose to sit on Web 2.0 and pay attention just to one of your screens :-)
@ Franciso,
Screens: Actually thats a really neat way of describing what are quite complex, layered and overlapping sets of demands... there's something about the level of 'intensity' here too and engagement that drives the interaction and amount of attention needed.
'screen wars' sounds like something Mr G. Lucas would be interested in! you should get Carlos to copywrite that one asap!
I think Castells would like this idea! something about potential info 'overload' and management in a networked sociality...
:-)
Carlos Tabernero is a researcher at UOC/IN3. He has developed this "concept" as a result of his work on "Communication as a Change Factor in the Information Society: Internet in Catalonia’s Audiovisual Context" directed by Manuel Castells and Imma Tubella
http://www.uoc.edu/in3/pic/eng/communication.html
I'm going to tell him about the "copywrite" :-)
Best,
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