Is Digital Communication Good Or Bad-Or Both?

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Technology is the use of knowledge and skills to accomplish a task and is a practice the human race constantly use. Since the beginning of civilization, the usage of technology has been a part of farming practices of early humans. Technology, such as farming, has since increased and developed throughout time with the emergence of new information. As a result, centuries of information and technology form what we now know as technology today. In today's current generation, the word technology describes computers and phones. The most commonly used technology today is virtually everywhere; the Internet. The Internet is a tool used to find anything from recipes to math problems, in ten seconds or less. Everyone uses this helpful piece of technology …show more content…

Digital communications use slang and use "little bursts and snippets" to get a point across versus using the big idea (Graff and Birkstein 168). The quality of this communication is also limited. Writers tend not to review what they write before posting. The point is also lost in translation when writing digitally. As stated in Is Digital Communication Good or Bad- or Both? " writers can too easily dismiss or ignore other points of views, and thus are more likely to engage in egotistical monologues..." (170). Furthermore, this type of writing does not allow writers to engage in deeper thinking and exchange ideas properly. These failures can result in limited summation and listening …show more content…

GPS provides satellite images of your location and gives detailed steps to a specific destination. A team at Cornell University research paper states that "With the GPS you no longer need to know where you are and where your destination is, attend to physical landmarks along the way..." (Carr 891). Having reduced navigational skills can potentially result in Alzheimer's disease. According to Bohbot, using our navigational skills "stimulates the hippocampus", an area of the brain responsible for memory. Limited navigational skills do not "stimulate the hippocampus and as a result, lead to a general loss of memory and a growing risk of dementia" (Carr