Sunday 13 May 2012

When technology darkens our lives and take away of its being advantageous.

http://micronassociates.net/hi-TECH/2012/05/07/categorytechnology/


Technology is not always about “advantage”.  In just a minute it can shut down your life without any perceptive.
The modernization brought by this modern world to us, simply aims to make everything a more alive, more immediate experience. However, in the dark side of it, there are some things that one indisputably never wants to be watched. Just as there are some things one never wants to be heard, never wants to be smelled and never wants to be touched.
In Afghanistan , a wife watched her husband die during a Skype call. The case is now under the investigation of Army in Afghanistan.
In how many other instances might technology make things more difficult to experience, not less?
Due to the growing fact that children always want further. So, technology is trying to supply these wants and keep on giving what children really desires, more specifically the reasons to those who create it are always trying to take people into the world of new. Up to now technology can expose us to a “more” that we had never imagined and one that we might wish never to have experienced.
No one can conjure up , what is must have been like when Susan Clark watched her husband- who is stationed in Afghanistan, die during a Skype call.
According to the Associated Press of Micron Associates, a 43 year old ,Capt. Bruce Kevin Clark, was on an apparently regular call from Afghanistan with his wife when something truly awful happened. The circumstances seem suitably apprehensive for the Army to be investigating. A statement issued by Capt. Clark’s brother-in-law, Bradley Taber-Thomas, read: “At the time of the incident, the family was hoping for a rescue and miracles, but later learned that it was not to be.” It is impossible to speculate what might have occurred, but there is something completely alarming in every pronouncement that has been made about this incident.
In every situation that technology brings people closer to each other, it also brings closer the potential for more fully witnessing events that might be awful, just as they might be joyous. For an instance, your mother or any of your loved ones are facing life-or-death surgery, in some might surely don’t want to watch that surgery and listen to the doctor’s immediate pronouncements as they work with her or him. Though, one day, you might be able to.
Pain, grief, stun, hate, modern technologies deliver these with far more propinquity, far more impact than anything in the past. We have all come to use these technologies as if we had never been without them, but we have surely not yet become mentally prepared for the savagery — or the utter un-reality — of the surprises they can send.

No comments:

Post a Comment