Sunday, November 24, 2013
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Mass of Amateurization
Isolation used to dominate cultures due to the difficulties of communicating, traveling, and understanding each other. Now, information has flooded the earth to the point where there is almost nowhere that you can go to escape the inundation. Everyone has an opinion, whether good or bad, and we have to filter through that the sea of trash to find the truly worthwhile treasures. This has made our problem, the problem of mass amateurization. Instead of a few professionals giving us advice and services, hundreds and even thousands of amateurs feed us there thoughts. The old often look to the young to help them with all the new technology, but even the youth are no more than users, limited in their knowledge and abilities. We can not spread ourselves too thin that we don't even know more than the superficial things that we are doing; we can not fall completely to amateurism. We have to keep a balance; we have to filter what comes our way and be active participants, not idle users. Facebook, Twitter, and even LinkedIn, captivate and distract their users past their own beneficial usefulness. The power that used to be held by a few: communication, publication, specialization; is substituted by millions of semi-reliable sources. This mass of new sources, however, has enabled many wonderful gems to be placed before the world. We need to find those gems, and strive to become producers of quality items, and not just consumers of mediocre junk.
Monday, November 18, 2013
Equality in the Sciences
In a meeting with the Skype division lead at Microsoft, he asked the only female intern in our entire division, "What made you want to major in CS?". Her answer hits one of the core ways to achieve diversity in the sciences, mathematics, and engineering careers; It was, that she grew up playing with a self-programmable robotics toy that interested her. The stereotype that programmers, mathematicians, scientists, and engineers are only men and that it's a "man's" job prevents many brilliant women from pursuing a career in those fields. These positions are becoming essential in today's society and women can, and should, play a role in that development. How can we stop the spread of this contagious way of thinking? By addressing it at the heart of problem, the family and early childhood development. Math, science, and engineering are not only for men! Women need to know that they are welcome in those fields and we are the ones that can help our and rising generations to partake in the glorious future we are making.
Monday, November 11, 2013
The Development Cycle
Big
corporations like Microsoft and Apple are finally learning a lesson that open
source developers have known for years, release early and release often. Yearly
releases of the Apple OS has become a staple and expectation of their clientele
over the past few years. Microsoft Office 365 is a constantly changing and
updating software that users can subscribe to in order to receive the latest
and greatest. Yet open source developers have adhered to this principle since
the development of Linux and even earlier. Consumers of a product want to see
their feedback and their ideas change and shape what they use; this is the idea
to which the "new" development cycle of software companies is
accommodating. Agile or bazaar, whatever you want to call it, is a change and
one that is for the betterment of software.
Thursday, November 7, 2013
The Church and Technology
"I am a Mormon". This ad campaign has helped in bridging the great divide of public opinion on the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I first heard about the "I am a Mormon" campaign in Uruguay during my mission for the Church and sadly, I missed the brilliance of it. Ignorance about our faith has been one of the major causes of persecution throughout the years and technology brings information to people. The Church realized that. As a result, Mormons are no longer those preppy people in white shirts and ties, but normal people with jobs, lives and difficulties. No longer are Google searches about Mormons polluted with lies and false information, but links to real profiles of members and resources provided by the Church. The Church has harnessed technology to fight ignorance and to help others get to know our purpose better, as members, we should too.
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