My Digital Timeline
- 1988 - I was born.
- 1992 - Our first computer at home. I played Reader Rabbit, Math Rabbit, and other educational games. (Did I mention these were on 5 1/4 floppy disks?!) I also remember printing out coloring sheets and Popsicle stick puppets from a Muppet's game on our dot matrix printer. It would make horrible screeching noises, but I was always fascinated at how the paper was all connected and loved tearing off the sides.
- 1993 - I began Kindergarten. There was one computer in the whole school that was on a cart so it could go from class to class. My mom volunteered in our class to man the computer cart once a week and bring in our copy of Reader Rabbit so everyone had a chance to play.
- 1994 - We hooked up to the internet at home via AOL.
- 1995 - My new elementary school had a computer lab of Apple computers. We would go in every so often to play games like Oregon Trail and Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego? (Click on the Oregon Trail link... it goes to the actual game!)
- 1996 - I wrote a research paper on New York using a CD-ROM version of Microsoft Encarta as one of my references.
- 2000 - My parents let me set up my own email account with AOL. I emailed like crazy, as well as participated in instant messaging and chat rooms.
- 2002 - Over the summer, I taught myself HTML coding and created a primitive website using Angelfire as a host. Later on, I set up a message board at ezboard, now Yuku and had over 100 users at one point. I learned how to make my own graphics with Adobe Photoshop. I set up an account on the social networking site Friendster. This is also the year that I got my first cell phone.
- 2003- I created a myspace account and a LiveJournal. I also took a semester-long course on Web Design and learned more about HTML coding.
- 2005 - I took a year-long course on Web Design and learned how to build websites using Adobe Dreamweaver. I also uploaded my first video to YouTube. I bought an iPod mini and discovered the joy of MP3 players.
- 2006 - I received my first laptop computer as a graduation gift and I created a facebook account. Over the summer, I used a web cam for the first time while IM-ing with friends while I was in Germany. I bought my first USB jump drive. This is also the year that I began text-messaging on a regular basis.
- 2008 - I took a class on Educational Technologies and also created my first wikispace.
- 2009 - I bought an external hard drive for my laptop.
- 2010 - My friends upgraded my dinosaur iPod by bestowing me with an iPod nano for graduation. I created a Google Site for my English 101 course and have been experimenting with other Google applications and checking out new sites for Digital Rhetoric.
Now to the readings for this week...
Porter's "Why technology matters to writing: A cyberwriter's tale" really struck a chord with me in terms of what my English 101 students have been saying when exploring their own experiences with writing on two points: 1. Good handwriting doesn't matter anymore. By the time you get to college, it's highly unlikely that you will ever turn an assignment in that isn't typed or submitted digitally; 2. The forms in which we compose have become increasingly digital. My students rarely draft essays on paper and then re-type them, instead, they sit down in front of the computer screen and spew whatever thoughts come to mind in to a Word document and call it good.
I noticed a sort of indirect crossover between Porter and Manovich in their mention of older technology's influence on the new. This especially stood out in Porter's discussion of the typewriter and how his son was unfamiliar on what one of those things even was. Yet, I'm sure his son doesn't think twice about typing on a computer keyboard, or perhaps sending a text message on a cell phone with a full QWERTY keypad. Without the invention and progression of the typewriter, we certainly wouldn't experience messaging on our phones in the way we do now.
Another thing I'm thinking about today is teaching digital composition, since unit 4 in my English 101 class is focused on re-genreing a piece to a digital medium and my plans for that are due on Thursday... these readings actually came at a good time for me in my teacher prep work as well. Porter talks about his experience teaching computer composition as one that "pushed [him] to consider visual design, page layout, and graphics as integral to rhetoric and writing" (7). This is something that is integral for us to consider while composing digitally and something I want to bring to the attention of my students when they work on this project.
Petersen's web page really pushes that thought in to more of a practical list of tips in "Writing for a Web Audience." She states that "readers understand more when reading less (50% fewer words work best when rewriting formal papers into Web pages) " and really gets in to how layout and ease of use help the reader understand the text on the screen. This website is definitely one that I will file away for future use in my teaching.
I agree with your initial comment--I found myself thinking "hmm...I was in diapers when that technological advance happened." I suspect it's possible to find type writers and these older computers/programs, but the only thing I feel like I'm really missing out on is Blade Runner (which I've actually never seen, let alone in a theater). My brother used to live in Boston, where he would visit a theater that showed really old films...I wonder if our culture wouldn't benefit from more common/prominent displays of yesteryear's technology and cinema like that.
ReplyDeleteRichard Samuelson
Huh. I think Hollywood did a remake of Blade Runner a while back, but I heard it was exceedingly lame and didn't really care to see it. But when Manovich said dystopia, I just substituted Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep and Brave New World for Blade Runner. This seemed to do the trick.(Btw, can we do italics-- somehow-- in these comments?)
ReplyDeleteI did think Manovich's use of Blade Runner and Macintosh was interesting at least, just because there does seem to be a tension between techno-optimism and visions of decay. Though I'm revealing some part of my nerd credentials here, I occasionally wonder if cinematic visions of the future-- say, Star Trek for instance-- could even become a feasible reality. And I don't mean technologically-- I mean culturally. I just wonder if we're actually smart enough to take advantage of the full potential of technology to craft a better world.
Oh God... I just brought up Star Trek on a blog post... I feel like such a nerd. :*(
Kimberly, I really get what you are saying in your opener! I'm not nearly as fluent in computers as you are, but they have existed for a great deal of my life, so some of the terminology has already become standard, even if I never really stopped to think about what it meant or where it came from. I think this is an issue for those of us who are under a certain age. This book assumes a certain amount of base knowledge that is not a given. I wasn't born when Blade Runner came out either, and I missed most of the primitive computers, jumping in to things in the early 90s with Oregon Trail and games like that. So, rest assured, there are other people unfamiliar with the 1984 release of Apple's amazing new technology.
ReplyDeleteThis reading actually prompted a conversation! with my brother -- although the convo took place via text since we can't be in the same room together and remain civil. Anyway, we talked about the different types of video games available and what preferences say about a person. But like you, although I'm a bit older, I'm having a lot of trouble tracking back to when what I do with computers is not second nature. I'm not adept with programming by any means, but I am at least as good as an average modern 6th grader. This class is beginning to remind me of my intro to linguistics class where I had to go back and pick apart how language is acquired when I was already fluent.
ReplyDeleteWhich also brings to light another frustration I have with the Manovich in that it assumes a universal experience. It doesn't matter that you can find Blade Runner on DVD -- the experience is fundamentally altered.
And also, LOVED LOVED LOVED Carmen Sandiego when I was a kid. It's the reason I still know where San Marino is.
Thanks for the comments! It feels nice to be read. :)
ReplyDeleteAmanda and Debra - I think you're right on with the point that Manovich's text "assumes a certain amount of base knowledge" and "assumes a universal experience." The Language of New Media was published in 2001, when I was in middle school, so I wonder who the audience is that Manovich wrote this text for. It's unlikely that it was tweens in the northwest.
Jeremy - not a nerd. Star Trek is awesome. I watched all of the Voyager series!
Richard - I noticed an ad at Edwards that the downtown BoDo theater is showing some old school films like Pulp Fiction, Casablanca, and Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
Boo Voyager. Next Generation all the way!
ReplyDeleteAnyways. Kimberly, your comment above just made me think of something - I wonder if everyone DID stop by to read your post and comment because you post started out with a timeline? This section of your post fits right in with several traits Peterson talks about. You've "harnessed the power of lists", and by doing so, possibly created something that jumps out at us as visually pleasing as we're scanning through posts trying to decide what to read this week. As I think back, I definitely think it drew me in, at least.
Excellent!
ReplyDelete