Retro-tech as Solution to Information Overload
From the "We make our buildings, then our building make us" Department...
Retro-tech as solution to
Information
Overload
The time-management maniacs over at
43
Folders pointed to
Paul
Ford's recent piece on
NPR entitled
Distracted
No More: Going Back to Basics
. Ford
provides an all-too-familiar criticism of the web: it is a time-sink
and a major
distraction. He isn't against distraction altogether, and muses
eloquently on
the importance of random associations that appear as one writes and
thinks. His
issue with the web is its superficiality, a sense that it is broad but
not deep.
His solution: retrotech. He hasn't given up on the web, but when he
wants to do
some serious thinking and writing, he takes out a low-tech laptop with
a black
and white screen and no internet connection, and boots up wordperfect
for DOS.
What's interesting about this is that he doesn't advocate a return to
really old
technology (the pen and the notepad), but older technology that doesn't
afford
the same level of immediacy and access. What does this mean for us on
campus who
are bathing every last inch of our social spaces with wireless
internet? Who
push laptops like drug-dealers push their wares? How does the web
handle the
human need for reflection?
For those of us who sometimes work the Information Literacy side of the street,
Ford's piece and its link from 43 Folders is suggestive of new ways of
thinking about information literacy and liberal arts education. What if
part of information literacy has to do with the selection of the
appropriate technology (both hardware and software) for a given task?
In a world awash in too much unmediated information, should we be
paying more attention to the time management gurus (Stephen Covey,
David Allen), whose work increasingly has to do with managing the flow
of information in your life? Allen's latest title "Ready for Anything "
could almost be an advertisement for what we want to say about our
graduates, suggesting that there may be a strange confluence between some
of the claims we make about liberal arts education and the goals
of content-neutral time management systems.
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