"Have You Ever Felt Like Throwing Your Computer Out The Window?"
Have you ever felt you need an engineering degree to figure
out how some of our modern technology works? How often were
you tempted to pick up your computer and throw it out the
window? If you were fortunate to have young children around during
our present technological revolution, consider yourself
lucky. They probably have become your gurus or experts,
when it comes to operating the VCR, or showing you how to
use the many software programs you always dreamed about,
but were afraid to admit you did not have the foggiest
notion how they worked. Calm down, take a deep breath, and pick up a copy of Brian
J. Nichelson's book entitled Taming Technology: You Can
Control The Beast.
The author of this slim book has been bringing people and
technology together for the past twenty- five years
researching the interactions between technology and humans. Focusing on three principal maxims: Technology is simpler
than you think: Technology equals people, and Technology is
interconnected, Nichelson unfolds some of the mysteries of
the beast, and counsels his readership to look at the big
picture, before succumbing to a defeatist attitude. The author illustrates, with concrete examples, how
technology affects everyone.
We are reminded that the "beast" controls every aspect of
our life.
You can't escape it- computers, VCRs, automobiles, washing
machines and dryers, telephones, fax machines, toasters,
copiers, scanners, tape recorders, CD players, and the list
is never ending. However, as pointed out, "understanding any given
technology within the proper context is important for
dealing successfully with that technology."
In other words, no technology works in a vacuum. It is, as
defined by the author, "humans trying to control our
environment." The key is to want to learn the fundamental principles, not
to accept simple explanations such as, "that's the way it
works," and always be patient. Be pro-active rather than
passive, and if you can share your knowledge with others-
all the better.
Think of technology as a giant jigsaw puzzle, we must find
the pieces and put them together, if we want to understand
how it all works.
Determine your needs, access the many sources available to
you, and sort them out in order to reap maximum benefits. After reading this compact book, the lingering question is-
will you take the author's final words, "now go out there
and make it work for you?"
Reviewed by Norman Goldman
Courtesy Bookpleasures
Posted July 31, 2003
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