[QUOTE] Originally posted by GePap
Absolutely. Yes.
Computers make life more efficient. They eliminate lag times in communications, they allow us to run incredibly detailed simulations for dirt cheap, etc.
Computers are everywhere because they increase efficiency by orders of magnitude and, in turn, unlock possibilities for new innovations such as the internet.
I've used the word catalyst repeatedly because it's an important one. Computers aren't a simple one-off innovation that made number crunching easier, they serve as a catalyst touching virtually every field under the sun and helping them evolve at a much faster pace.
They are everywhere because they are important in this end.
As I said before, THIS IS THE QUESTION! Have the quantitative improvements made by computers been so great as to mean a qualitative change in the use of things, or the relation between people and systems?
Yes/No, explain.
Yes/No, explain.
Computers make life more efficient. They eliminate lag times in communications, they allow us to run incredibly detailed simulations for dirt cheap, etc.
Computers are everywhere because they increase efficiency by orders of magnitude and, in turn, unlock possibilities for new innovations such as the internet.
I've used the word catalyst repeatedly because it's an important one. Computers aren't a simple one-off innovation that made number crunching easier, they serve as a catalyst touching virtually every field under the sun and helping them evolve at a much faster pace.
They are everywhere because they are important in this end.
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