Information Age
Information age (also known as the Computer Age, Digital Age, or New Media Age) is a period in human
history characterized by the
shift from traditional industry that the Industrial Revolution brought through industrialization, to an economy based on
information computerization Digital
media are any media that are encoded in a machine-readable format. Digital media can be created, viewed, distributed,
modified and preserved on digital electronics devices. Computer programs and software;
Digital
media is digitized content that can be transmitted over the internet or
computer networks. This can include text, audio, video, and graphics.
This means that news from a TV network, newspaper, magazine, etc. that is
presented on a Web site or blog can fall into this category. Most digital media
are based on translating analog data into digital data. The Internet began to
grow when text was put onto the Internet instead of stored on papers as it was
previously. Soon after text was put onto computers images followed, then came
audio and video onto the Internet. Digital media has come a long way in the few
short years to become as we know it today and it continues to grow.
The following are the
characteristics of information age
Digitality include near continuous contact with other
people through cell
phones, near
instantaneous access to information through the World
Wide Web, third wave information storage
(where any fragment in a text can be searched and used for categorization, such
as through search engine Google), and communicating through weblogs and email. Some of the negative aspects of digitality include computer
viruses, loss of anonymity and spam.
INTERACTIVITY Interactivity has
become a term for a number of new media use options evolving from the rapid
dissemination of internet access
points, individual with the appropriate technology can now produce his or her
online media and include images, text, and sound about whatever he or she
chooses.
Manipulation of information is a significant economic, political, and cultural activity.
Its main driver are digital information and
communication technologies, which have
resulted in an information explosion and are profoundly changing all aspects of social
organization, including the economy, education, health, warfare, government and democracy.
Networking We all gain our
knowledge by tapping into the knowledge of others. It is technology which can
ease the information transfer, but it’s the people behind the technology that
are doing the sharing. When you find information relevant for your work or
study, note the person behind the information and follow them. Find what Linked
In groups they are members of, if they have a face book page, or twitter etc
and follow them and when you use well social network can help to create what we
call social capital. But without being fully informed you may even be searching
for the wrong information, or less relevant information for your field of
study.
BY JOSHUA HELENA M
BAPRM 42571
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