What are the
“New Media?
The term “new media” will in general refer to
those digital media, which are interactive, incorporate two-way communication
and involve some form of computing as opposed to “old media” such as the
telephone, radio and TV. These older media, which in their original incarnation
did not require computer technology, now in their present configuration make
use of computer technology as do so many other technologies, which are not
necessarily communication media like refrigerators and motor cars.
Many
“new media” emerged by combining an older medium with computer chips and a hard
drive. We have surrounded the term “new media” with quotation marks to signify
that they are digital interactive media. When we use the term new media without
quotation marks we are generically denoting media
.To
better illustrate the difference in the terminology we can say that today all
“new media” are new media. We can also say in 1948 that TV could be classified
as part of the new media of its day but not as “new media” as we have defined
the term above. TV integrated with a computer to form a digital video recorder
such as TiVo system (31.10) can be, on the other hand, classified as an example
of the “new media”.
Our definition of “new media” is similar to
the definitions of other authors. Some describe “new media” as the ability to
combine text, audio, digital video, interactive multimedia, virtual reality,
the Web, email, chat, the cell phone, a PDA like the Palm Pilot or Blackberry,
computer applications, and any source of information accessible by one’s
personal computer. Lev Manovich for one describes new media as new cultural forms
which are native to computers or rely on computers for distribution: Web sites,
human-computer interface, virtual worlds, VR, multimedia, computer games,
computer animation, digital video, special effects in cinema and net films,
interactive computer installations. (Bolter and Grusin (1999, p. 45) define new
media in terms of remediation: “We call the representation of one medium in
another remediation and we will argue that remediation is the defining
characteristic of the new digital media.” They then go on to say that “all
mediation is remediation.” If this is the case how does one distinguish new
media from old media? In fact their idea originates with McLuhan who observed
that the first content of a new medium is some older medium.
A
similar problem arises when Bolter and Grusin make the excellent point that old
and new media remediate or refashion each other mutually. “What is new about
new media comes from the particular ways in which they refashion older media
and the ways in which older media refashion themselves to answer the challenges
of new media.” Once again this statement does not tell us which are the new
media and which are the older media and amounts to defining new media in terms
of chronology. Their statement contains a truism, however, that applies to the
relation of newer and older media through the ages.
By
JOSHUA HELENA M
BAPRM
42571
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