Thursday, March 31, 2011

Its alive!

 In edit class this semester we spent a great deal of time talking about the Internet and its pros and cons. we talked at great length about how the Internet is a tool that should be used for the good of man kind. we also spoke about how the it can be very dangerous if used for the wrong reason. With all these things said, I still find it fascinating that the Internet has, for lack of a better word mutated far beyond the control of its creators, to the point where no one entity can control it. there is no Donald Trump or Rupert Murdock on the other end of the Internet controlling what we can and can not access. the closest thing we might have right now is google, and even that cannot limit what people can access.

 I had a teacher once who spoke very passionately about Frankenstein. She argued that the the story of Frankenstein has become one of the most re told stories of our time. Think about it. The movies Terminator, the Matrix, I Robot, and Tron are all stories about how man creates something that eventually grows beyond his own control.
  It seems to me like the Internet has become our own real life version of Frankenstein. It may be good, it may be bad. that's for us to find out. All I know is that briliant minds that created the Internet didn't have a clue what they had made until the moment they stepped back and realised "its alive!". Ok maybe not, but it is definitely not under their control any more.             

Friday, March 4, 2011

helpful programs

    for the first half of this semester I learned about many new tools that Im sure I will find helpful in the future.
I really like xtranormal and go animate. I also found prezi to be an exciting alternative to powerpoint. However, I did find it frustrating that some of the sites seem to be rigid up so that you almost need to purchase credits if you plan on using the site more than once. Maybe its just me, but if I dont know what something can do for me I have a tough time justifying spending money on it, and I am getting tired of signing up for on line programs that can only do one or two things and can only be used once without paying. I already have more user names and passwords than I care to remember.
 
 I had a similar problem with Adobe photoshop, It took me almost the length of the trial period to figure out how to use the program, and I was only scratching the surface of what it could do for me. The cost of photoshop is $700 dollars and up depending on the version you want. I dont have $700 to spend on something I dont know how to use. I know that for many of the programs like Adobe photoshop I can go on line and find thousands of helpful tutorials and forums that will tell me how to use it. The problem is that many of the online help sites often offer anonymous advice on how to get these programs for free (aka stealing). As it stands right now, I am learning how to use these programs from the same places that are also telling me how to steal them. This puts me at a crossroads. I can get ahead by stealing and teaching myself how to use these very useful programs. Or I can fall behind by either spending money I dont have, or by denying myself access to tools that I know will help me in the future.  
  
I think that if schools really want to teach good digital citizenship, they need to start  offering courses that help students learn the potential of these programs before students have to buy them.