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Hardcover Data Smog: Surviving the Information Glut Book

ISBN: 0060187018

ISBN13: 9780060187019

Data Smog: Surviving the Information Glut

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Book Overview

Cyberpundit And Media Scholar David Shenk Launches A Trenchant And Informed Critique Of The Impact Of Data Smog -- Information Overload -- On Individual Well-Being And Our Society As A Whole. Picking Up Where Silicon Snake Oil And The Gutenberg Elegies Left Off, Shenk Skillfully Explodes The Rosy Myths Of The Technological Revolution, Points The Way Toward A Saner And More Meaningful Future, And Offers The Most Convincing And Thorough Rebuttal Yet...

Customer Reviews

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Overwhelmed by Information? This book might help

Are we drowning in a sea of information? Blinded by a smog of data? That's Shenk's premise, and I have to admit I'm in somewhat of an agreement with him. It's either agree with him, or admit that I'm getting old and can't keep up anymore. We are of an age, however--he relates how his first computer was a Macintosh in 1984. He talks about becoming involved in the early days of digital communication (back then, there was Compu$erve, the $ource, and local BBSes). He went on the reporting route, while I took the technology route. Now we both feel surrounded by too much stuff, data being the prime component. Shenk blames it on the new medium, whereas I think that maybe it is the nature of our general society.Don't get me wrong. I love data. Databases are your friend, and they've certainly been mine, as I make my living off maintaining them, writing interfaces for them, and creating reports from them. The problem seems to go back to something much older than the Internet, but to the early days of computing. There is a term, not in much use today, called GIGO: Garbage In, Garbage Out. Too much data being stored in databases these days was dumped there, without editing, without sorting, without review. Just because modern tools allow you access to data in these storage areas better, faster, and cheaper, does not mean that data poorly stored has any more value. I am sure many of you have run into a case where the computer was supposed to help you with a task, but instead it just seems that you were able to process more data, not necessarily do the job quicker or easier. More data, as Shenk discusses, is not a solution. Better data would be, but no one is providing quality.And this is where I say the problem is not the technology but the society. Americans have a hard time with quality. We give it lip service, but what we really want is quantity. The tagline for Godzilla, "Size matters," was perfect for us. Yes, we want more. We want a biggie fries and a biggie shake. We want to Super Size that Extra Value Meal. We purchase Range Rovers and the only range we rove is the median when there's a traffic jam. Let's go to CostCo and get the five-pound jar of spaghetti sauce, even though we only eat spaghetti at home once every two months. We'll take 52 channels of crap on the cable, although only four are worth watching. Bigger, we imply, is always better. Our hardware store here has a tagline that says they have "more of everything."Shenk says, more is less. You are a limited creature; you can only handle a limited amount of input. Why not get some quality input for a change? I like the idea, and I have to admit that Jill and I were already working towards this goal before our move. Jill calls it "divesting ourselves of the material culture," but mainly it's just getting rid of stuff. Why did we have 700 CDs? We couldn't listen to them all, and hadn't listened to more than 5% in the last year. Why did we have 2000 books--did we intend to reference or reread all

Beware the Smog!

Data Smog presents the good, the bad, and the ugly of what the Information Age is all about. For those of us on the fringes of the technology revolution, it is an eye-opener. Shenk shares many personal anecdotes to demonstrate his points. His clever use of language in "The Laws of Data Smog", chapter titles and description make it an enjoyable read. However, it's a bit hard to swallow his solutions, coming from an admitted information junkie. While he suggests ways we can reduce data smog, he doesn't quite succeed in convincing us that he has cleaned up his own act.Shenk starts out with an appropriately brief account of the evolution of the information age, to explain how we got to the point of data smog. He clearly shows how information overload is creating more confusion, more stress, and decreased attention. His argument that technology threatens personal privacy is well-supported and currently a hot-button issue. His claim that the development of niches from sophisticated data analysis will splinter our culture is not quite as convincing. He has to be commended, though, for taking a stand against the idea that technology always means progress.As an educator I had to take issue with the analogy he makes in "The Fourth Law of Data Smog: Putting a computer in every classroom is like putting an electric power plant in every home." I would argue that computers are a vital addition to the classroom, if used appropriately. If they are only used for skill and drill, then yea, they don't give much advantage over paper and pencil worksheets. But when computers are used for researching, communicating with others, and making projects, they are a nice tool that adds to the educational experience. In addition, computers increase teacher productivity immeasureably. As always, the focus needs to be on what is best for student learning... technology provides more tools that give more options for how we teach. Computers will be a major part of life in the future and we need to teach kids the skills they need to use them properly.

Fiber for your brain

Feeling a bit blitzed lately? Like you're mentally constipated? Like you're just a tube through which someone or something rams the maximum amount of stuff every day? Yeah, I get that, too. In my job, which mainly boils down to reading and processing paper and email 40 hours weekly (weakly?), "data smog" is a constant companion. Ladies and Gentlemen, our Information Age is becoming Information Rage. I know I feel it. And now, at last, someone has been able to articulate-- elegantly--what many of us experience in the early 21st Century. David Shenk is that person, and DATA SMOG is his statement.The second law of thermodynamics, the Entropy law, tells us that the more energy we push through a system, the less that is absorbed and the more that is disapated as waste. This is precisely the problem with our information-saturated environment, and Shenk charts this disorder across the societal landscape--vulgarity, ADD, diminished decision-making, a general feeling of distraction and anxiety are all part of this mix. Quite simply, Shenk puts to words what many of us subconsciously feel. It is comforting to read.Certain criticisms of this book hold that Shenk is heavy on analysis but light on solutions. I would argue that yes, the solutions appear simple, but yes, also, that sometimes the best solutions ARE simple. The symptoms and processes of information glut may be complex, but unplugging the TV is a wonderfully down-to-earth way to address it. Shenk offers more than this, of course. Far more.DATA SMOG is an important book, more important than most people will realize. Cyberspace is the thing these days, but human biology will never catch up. And the more we try to catch up, the more we should expect to forget things like what we ate this morning, or what it's like to be at peace without some switch always clicking in our heads. Simple things. We all need information to live, but just as important are the gaps between that information and our ability to make sense of it. That's the difference between information and knowledge. Buy this book. It's one bit of information that will help you make sense of all the rest.

Book of the year

Unstoppable reading, full of wit and insight. David Shenk is a true visionnaire. May this book give some peace to your overloaded brain.

The browser UPGRADE that shatters the paradigm!

David Shenk throws needed light on the problems of the confusion of information as knowledge. We need to remember that knowledge depends on making important distinctions within value-rich contexts. Such distinction-making illuminates important and meaningful existential relations between persons and things. In this light, the browser industry's attempt to substitute the certainty of knowledge for the push of opinions demands re-evaluation. The dangers of information glut now require our discipline, moderation, and caution when we integrate the information of the mass media and the internet into ourselves. Perhaps, enrichment of this kind (if it is to be enrichment and not our demise!) also requires an enlightened and correct conscience to resist unwholesome and self-destructive influences. Thoughtful and important, keep a copy of "Data Smog" close to your computer when you need a strong dose of common sense. Shenk's book is the one necessary UPGRADE that the browser giants have all failed to incorporate into their new and unimproved packages. Perhaps, Netscape and Microsoft will forget about PUSH technology. Instead, they can ship Shenk's "Data Smog" with the upcoming browser releases. This needed upgrade would help real people better evaluate the integrity of information and its value within the context of cultural promotion and formation. While society has a right to information based on truth, freedom, justice, and solidarity, Shenk re-affirms the wisdom that demands the proper exercise of such a right. The content of information, for example, must be true and complete in the context of justice and charity. Shenk's "Information Smog" also explores other ethical considerations. Does the communication of information, for example, require a certain integrity? Minimally, information must be communicated with honesty and conditioned by an ethics that does not permit the offending and corruption of our intelligence and dignity. In this context, civil authorities are responsible for defending and safeguarding public morality and social progress from the misuse of information. Indeed, such abuses are scandalous to the common good. Would shipping "Data Smog" with the new browsers represent the kind of paradigm-shattering breakthrough that is all we ever really wanted in a new browser? YES! But why the browser war commentators and designers didn't figure this out a lot sooner may come as a surprise to us all. It is more evidence that the techno-queens are not so smart; they actually are a little bit slower than the rest of us. Isn't it ironic! Stan Faryna Co-editor BLACK AND RIGHT The Bold New Voice of Black Conservatives in America (Praeger Publishers, 1997)
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