t
Loading...

Distinguishing “between the technology that makes your life easier and the technology that breeds mindlessness”

By |2025-04-21T01:30:35-07:00September 22nd, 2013|Attention / Distraction, Contemplative computing|

Dylan Love on the case against Google Now: How do we draw the distinction between the technology that makes your life easier and the technology that breeds mindlessness?

Comments Off on Distinguishing “between the technology that makes your life easier and the technology that breeds mindlessness”

“A writer who waits for ideal conditions under which to work will die without putting a word on paper”

By |2025-04-21T01:30:35-07:00September 20th, 2013|Attention / Distraction, Contemplative computing, Science, Writing|

When I was writing The Distraction Addiction, I got into the habit of getting up super-early to write. I'm not a morning person, and never have been, but

Comments Off on “A writer who waits for ideal conditions under which to work will die without putting a word on paper”

Survey on digital detox

By |2025-04-21T01:30:35-07:00September 20th, 2013|Sabbaths, Travel|

The Huffington Post reports that a "recent report from consumer research company SDL" that interviews 4000 people from the US, UK and Australia about their travel habits reveals

Comments Off on Survey on digital detox

“Calmnness is a fundamental challenge for all technological design of the next fifty years”

By |2025-04-21T01:30:35-07:00September 19th, 2013|Architecture and Environment, Contemplative computing, Technology|

From Weiser and Brown's 1996 article, "The Coming Age of Calm Technology [pdf]" this still rings true today: When computers are used behind closed doors by experts, calmness

Comments Off on “Calmnness is a fundamental challenge for all technological design of the next fifty years”

“Keep strangers and people you hated in high school up to speed with every mundane detail of your life 24/7”

By |2025-04-21T01:30:35-07:00September 19th, 2013|Contemplative computing, Social media, Technology|

This almost makes me want to buy Grand Theft Auto V: the in-game version of Twitter called Bleeter. Here's the description: Information isn't about imparting knowledge anymore. The

Comments Off on “Keep strangers and people you hated in high school up to speed with every mundane detail of your life 24/7”

“The point is not to shun technology… [but] to reflect on how it’s used”

By |2025-04-21T01:30:35-07:00September 16th, 2013|Architecture and Environment, Attention / Distraction, Contemplative computing|

Australian philosopher Damon Young has a piece about photography, self-distraction, and the use of cameras to avoid deeper interactions and difficult questions: We are not simply eyes and

Comments Off on “The point is not to shun technology… [but] to reflect on how it’s used”
Go to Top