The Death of Distance
I presented at the 'Societies in transition : Asia and Europe at a Moment of Change' conference organise by the Asia Europe society.
When | Mar 20, 1998 |
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Where | Ware, Hertfordshire |
I addressed the following questions:
Is Asia growing closer to "Europe'' and if so how?
- Not without human, social or business purposes;
- example: Indian wedding by videoconference.
Is distance dying and why?
- Yes: the potential for a "presence" both synchronously though telephone, broadcast and two-way video conferences and asynchronously through email and world-wide-web internet can give the appearance of its death;
- no: the realities of separation, geographical and temporal still remain, particularly correspondents do not share more than a limited contextual experience.
Who gains and loses by this?
- Losers: technology poor, publishing establishment, disseminators;
- winners: technology rich, information engineers, communicators, democracy.
How do culture and values change as a result?
- New cultures, human desire for community;
- New dangers, common sense still applies;
- Culture and value clashes more evident to all - defensiveness from authorities and awareness promoted to citizens.
What impact does this have if so?
- Permits cost effective communication;
- supports new forms of discourse;
- lowers to insignificant the costs of global publishing;
- permits knowledge transfer to and from all, further democratising knowledge;
- widens choice for services, collaboration and markets;
- sanitises human contact;
- presents a massive challenge to develop protocols for taxonomising, evaluating and verifying authenticity of information;
- shakes up current media world;
- should change our concept of literacy.
(Words: 283 )