Wednesday, April 28, 2010

A Day Without Technology

Wendell Berry wrote a very interesting article called Why I am NOT Going to Buy a Computer. As he points out in both the original article and his responses to the letters that the article provoked, he is a well-known conservationist, and tries to be as little dependent on fossil fuel as possible. He listed at the end his criteria for adopting new technology--

1. The new tool should be cheaper than the one it replaces.
2. It should be at least as small in scale as the one it replaces.
3. It should do work that is clearly and demonstrably better than the one it replaces.
4. It should use less energy than the one it replaces.
5. If possible, it should use some form of solar energy, such as that of the body.
6. It should be repairable by a person of ordinary intelligence, provided that he or she has the necessary tools.
7. It should be purchasable and repairable as near to home as possible.
8. It should come from a small, privately owned shop or store that will take it back for maintenance and repair.
9. It should not replace or disrupt anything good that already exists, and this includes family and community relationships.


I'll be honest--I have never thought about the issues raised here. Computers have been a part of my life for as long as I can remember, so questioning whether they are a good thing or not, for me, is like questioning whether, if you think hard enough, the ceiling can become the floor (ninjas have many skills, but we are still not spiders). I have given more thought to, and it has been easier for me to think about, the implications of my eating habits than to this slim piece of technology that I use literally every. day.

It is actually easier for me to fast, to go a day without eating, than to go a day without my laptop--even without one single website! Fasting technology is a big deal for me--in no small part because so much of my schoolwork requires not only a computer, but the internet. For one of my classes, the reading material is entirely online, for another I have internet exercises, for another 3/4 of the questions for my homework assignments live on a website, for another I write reports in Microsoft Word, and for yet another I write essays and even have a blog! Out of 5 classes, only one does not assume that I have access to a computer with internet, and I still use a computer for one aspect of it.

Far be it from a ninja, though, to conceal truth--I do have one segment of technology that I can give up without dire consequences to my grades, and that would be my favorite social network. You would never guess it from my blog posts, but my favorite method of communication with the outside world constrains me to 140 characters or less--a micro-blogging site. So for an experiment, a technology fast if you will, I neglected this site for a full day.

The result of the experiment was about half an hour, after I returned from the day's classes, where I nearly exploded. I seriously considered going to another social networking site and creating an account just to scratch the itch that not visiting my standard site created. Fortunately the madness passed, and I had one of my most productive afternoons ever--but that itself makes one wonder, doesn't it? Those of us that use these terribly addictive sites know that they're time-sucks, call them time-sucks, and completely ignore in our use Berry's 9th rule, above--that new technology shouldn't replace or disrupt what was there and good and worked.

There's enough material in this diminutive essay and my responses to it for another 3 blog posts, but I won't bend your ears any longer--to think I started this with the modest goal of 500 words!

2 comments:

  1. I can say that I really enjoyed reading what you said and it does may me think about how much I too rely on technology. Except for me instead of a social network I think mine is mainly Word, since I enjoy writing. Other than that, I liked your word choice and how you referred back to ninja type ways. By doing so, you made your article very interesting to read.

    Another thing, in which I can agree on, is that I went without my phone for a day and just had the feeling that I was forgetting something all day. Not to mention the fact that my pocket felt empty and that it was very difficult to contact people. The main thing to me is that technology needs to stop changing so rapidly...for me I want to say all my classes depend on a computer at some point in time. For all my teachers put work on the computer (reviews, labs, homework, grades, and assignment information) that they expect you have some sort of access to. I truly don't remember what life was like without computers, since it has been integrated into my everyday life since I was little playing typing games in elementary school, to now using a blog for a class and typing and doing homework on a computer.

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  2. I enjoyed your post very much. I know how it feels to go a day without a piece of yourself. Kudos for that.
    More than I enjoyed reading about your day without technology, I like very much the way you write. I was raised by a writer, so these things stand out to me.
    Ahem... anyway, nice job on going without that social networking.

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