Tag: blackberry

Testing the WordPress Blackberry App

Posted by – February 28, 2010

This is me, testing the app. It works great however any major blogging from my Blackberry with my giant hands would result in severe amounts of misspelling and amazing grammar. Onward.

Being Informed: Be Careful What You Ask For

Posted by – November 26, 2009

What Have I Done?

office-sign-blackberry1I have a BlackBerry.

Sent to my BlackBerry all day, every day, are the following:

  • Personal email (3 different accounts serving different purposes)
  • Work email
  • Personal/Work Calendar/Meeting updates
  • Facebook activity
  • MySpace activity (much less so now since I’m not on there very often anymore)
  • Twitter activity
  • News feeds via RSS that I’ve set up covering everything from entertainment to science to business & marketing
  • SMS/MMS messages from my teenage boys, friends, and family across the world

One of my sons asked me the other day if I read all that stuff and while I can say that I don’t read through everything from top to bottom, I DO comb through every message, more or less snacking on the headlines that show up on my phone. It’s now a habit.

Sometimes it has really benefited me when it comes to getting tweets about traffic problems on a highway I was about to jump on, family emergencies, my boys letting me know where they are after school, or I get notified about a last minute meeting cancellation so I don’t show up and no one is there after my 30 minute commute to make it on time.

Sometimes it’s maddening. I end up reading (and having some sort of emotional reaction to, ranging from mellow to freak out) a ton of information all at once, almost sending me over the edge. Whereas before all this technology, we were generally receiving the major milestone headlines and information in “groups of 1” or 2 at a time..sometimes 3….a more palpable rate. That was at least what our brains were trained to take in and process effectively at the time.

I think that in a lot of ways it has gotten most people more stressed out than they are aware they are. Even if the information overload they’re receiving is positive, it’s still overload. Every message that triggers any type of mental/emotional response out of you removes you yet one more notch away from reality, the here and now slips away. In a corporate world where there are new movements of people trying to encourage a culture of work/life balance, are we effectively countering that ideal by checking all of our messages/tweets/emails on our iPhones right before checking into our visit to In-N-Out Burger on Foursquare?

I’m Not Alone.

The other day established journalist/editor Jennifer Van Grove (@jbruin on Twitter), Associate Editor for Mashable and NBC San Diego correspondent, had tweeted, “my feed reader is out of control… one day off & I feel like the world has moved on without me.” Nowadays, we are all so accustomed to getting so much information from so many directions. I wonder if there’s a battle going on inside all of us now; one side wants to be in the moment and think only about what is in front of us and tangible, the other side takes the concept prevalent in most journalists to know as much as possible as fast as possible so that we are ahead of the game.

I get teased by my less-than-tech friends often (or those friends that perhaps take time to smell the roses more often than I) but one interesting thing is that no matter how much info I have sent to me or that I go out and get myself, there are always 1,000+ more people out there that are taking in more information than me (and if they’re good people, they pass on the good stuff to the rest of us).

The Repercussions of High Volume Input

ahumadaAre there any when you are plugged in, feeding your brain at the level that it can now fed? I know there are effects on certain chemicals in your body and brain that are known to get a boost or be negatively affected when watching too much TV or staring at a screen. Hundreds of studies have proven all kinds of things. I have to wonder, based on my inability to put my BlackBerry down without convulsing into a harsh moment of data withdrawal, how this has affected us in our physical and behavioral day to day.

My Two Cents

A long time ago in a small town probably close by, some dude would drop off stacks of newspapers on every street corner of every block. We’d all buy these newspapers and crack them open, reading our local news, snippets of what is going on with the rest of the world. I’m talking about back in the day when families would huddle around a radio listening to Howdy Doody. The amount of news back then was so minimal, simple-minded (to our social/cultural detriment in some cases when it changes to close-minded). The only life experiences and tidbits of global humanity we heard or read about back then were nebulous speculations at best. Honestly I think there was some value back in those days that will probably never be recaptured. The time spent to digest one piece of news was much more organic, made available to us at a pace that didn’t feel so Johnny Mneumonic.

I think that at some point (and now to a certain extent), the amount of information and the way we currently receive it (txt, email, Twitter clients, et al) has minimized a lot of the emotional value of most of the news that aggressively shoves itself across our new reader tools of choice. I think that previous eras in communication allowed us more time and more room to take in some information, process it, break it down, and then reassemble it so that our brains can make sense out of it and compartmentalize it for later use as a memory.

The current era in communication, news and information sometimes leaves me feeling numb. By the time I read a headline, decide I’m interested in knowing more and plan to check out the actual article, 50 more articles have just shown up that (now out of trained obsessive compulsion) I want to also scan and see if there’s anything interesting in there that I might also want to form a response. I then see one in that next batch and want to pursue it..but then more news comes down….and so on.

The Unstoppable, Inevitable Curve

I speak of the exponentially increasing sharpness of a curve that represents the rate at which information flows to people as technology and culture become more advanced and progressive. I wonder where it will land us in 10 years. Will we all have feeds piped directly into our subconscious so that we can continue to receive loads of information without “wasting” our conscious thoughts on it? Will diagnosed anxiety/depression become more prevalent as we are exposed to 100 times more bad news headlines via RSS/Twitter/Facebook.

Wikipedia even has an entry for Information Addiction.

Time to sign up for my 12-step program.