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mcluhan

Brain Locker: Ubiquitous Computing Interrupted

No. I’m not exaggerating. That’s what it feels like when I leave my net-connected iPhone behind to spend time within a secure area at USTRANSCOM.

McLuhan’s insight has been validated by recent experiments: Tools are experienced as extensions of the body. An intimate Ubiquitous Computing device like an iPhone extends memory, speech, hearing and nervous system. Removing it from my person and locking it away is like a self-inflicted virtual lobotomy.

21 March 2010 iphone asynchrony UC mcluhan comic DoD


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“We shape our tools and thereafter our tools shape us” Marshall McLuhan

It seems to me that those of us who’ve come to depend on technology for memory support are just the leading wave of a long tide of human adaptation. The memorization skills that were developed over generations of life within oral cultures have been heading towards an evolutionary dead end since the invention of writing.

I like Marshall McLuhan’s perspective that each tool/invention/technology can be viewed an enhancement of a biologically-based human capability. The invention of the phonetic alphabet by the Ancient Greeks extended memory from the brain to the page. It emancipated humans from the rigid psychological structures required to transmit cultural knowledge through the generations. It therefore freed the present from the past and set the stage for the development of abstract thinking.

I wonder what unforeseen human potential will be freed by our increasingly pervasive connection to web-based repositories, social networks and virtual environments?

13 April 2009 comic mcluhan iphone evernote


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