Monday, July 28, 2008

The Internet Kills Brain Cells

The New York Times had an interesting article yesterday on how the internet is changing reading. Long story short, it seems to decrease attention spans and lead people to cut to the chase more. The picture at the top of the column is indicative of this; starting with books, moving to newspapers, and finally going to laptop computers.
I think that I have found this to be absolutely true. While I still love books, I think that I have gotten less patient for the hardy prose of yore and prefer a quicker, Dan Brownian style. It's not that I won't read the wordier books, but I don't jump at them like I used to. The area where I notice it even more though is when I am reading articles on the internet. I will start a column, then open up a new tab and get something else loading while I'm reading. I skip around a lot more than I used to in newspapers, shooting from column to column to the point where I'm actively trying to refocus my energies on a single thing at a time. Multitasking is great, and I think you can get a lot of information very quickly by scanning the internet, but you don't get the deep knowledge of a subject that you can from buckling down and focusing on a specific topic. As a result, you may not analyze what you need to, which could cause problems. Now I think there is a place for both styles of reading, even from the same person in the same position, but at different times. It's just a matter of working to use both styles to help get more rounded than you otherwise would. So far, I think it's worked pretty well for me, although I have a ways to go yet before I get back to where I don't jump around between a bunch of different tabs, even when I'm in the middle of writing a blog post or doing something where I need to keep on one train of thought for a while. Does anybody else have thoughts? Has the internet made you more scattered (or multitasky)? Is it a force for good or evil? Etc etc?

1 comment:

Michael 聖 Brady said...

Well, you want comments, so I'ma givin em to ye.

First of all, there is no picture to accompany your wordy blog entry. But yes, I do the same thing. Here are the tabs that are almost ALWAYS open when I'm online. I call them "The Consortium":

1. Gmail (NOT logged into chat)
2. WebCT: The U of U's online class student center
3. NBA.com
4. More specifically, nba.com/jazz
5. nba.com/blazers, since I am relinquished to default fandom (but truth be known, I like it)
6. espn.com/nba
7. threewinksstudio.blogspot.com: this is by a great friend of mine who actually has talent.
8. Sorro blog: then I check out Cheeth and Mickel from there, if updates exist. Sorro's is generally fairly fresh.
9. mail.yahoo.com, so I can monitor work emails and be prepared in the morning when I actually repond to them

So there are 9. Sometimes I'll have my wife's blog up, Facebook, or the daily sudoku puzzle from Pogo. But I like to have 9 so that I can refer to them as the Nazgul.

However, I still love good books. I find myself reading only churchy ones, you know, commentary on Revelation or a biography on Pratt or Tyndale. I do this for fun. Once school is OVER over, I will finally finish my Tyndale bio. I read the newspaper, but online as well. I know I miss a lot, but oh well.