Today it is not uncommon for us to spend literally a day online. We start our day by checking our email, followed by a quick tweet and then we scan our Facebook live feeds to find out what everyone else is up to. We use our GPS, Blackberry Messenger and research information online through out our day. When we come home we hop online and browse sports scores and news quickly before we spend some quality time with our families in front of the television.
The web is prevalent on our daily schedules. We don't have to spend a day in front of our computer screen to see the amount we have come to rely on new technologies. With smart phones and tablets our lives are slowly merging with the web. We use applications to make browsing for information easier... be it take out or our banking. With an ap for pretty much everything, the door is open to capitalism. Enabling companies to create technologies we download, pay for and incorporate onto the list of applications making life that much easier.
Does this mean that all the regular uses for the web are pretty much dead?
The web is prevalent on our daily schedules. We don't have to spend a day in front of our computer screen to see the amount we have come to rely on new technologies. With smart phones and tablets our lives are slowly merging with the web. We use applications to make browsing for information easier... be it take out or our banking. With an ap for pretty much everything, the door is open to capitalism. Enabling companies to create technologies we download, pay for and incorporate onto the list of applications making life that much easier.
Does this mean that all the regular uses for the web are pretty much dead?
The advancing technologies and the growing importance of the web in our daily lives is creating interesting movements and attitudes in regards to our mentality on some software. The concept of open-source software is to let people copy, change and redistribute software as long as they do the same with the new software they create. The concept is not about profit but about a level playing field for participants and a concept is similar to that of wikis, user generated content and crowd sourcing. The future is ours to re-write, pass along and improve and technology is on our side!
Chris Anderson and Michael Wolff, "The Web Is Dead. Long Liver the Internet." & Dr. Ian Reilly's Lecture Winter 2011, Week 12