Currently I’m reading
Randi Zuckerberg’s book Dot Complicated:
Untangled Our Wired Lives (Harper-Collins Publishers, 2013), she wrote:
“’Zuck’s Law,’ so-named for my dear brother, says that the amount of information we share in the
world doubles every two years. In the time it takes you to read a single
page of this book, another hundred hours of cat videos, hilarious skateboarding
dogs, and many other, er, valuable pieces of content will have been uploaded to
the web. Over a million tweets will have been shared. Some of them will
actually be read. And over sixteen million pieces of content will have been
posted on Facebook. That’s a lot of photos of people’s lunches.
Today, we expect to be online all the time, and we expect
to be reachable everywhere. We usually are.
A Morgan Stanley Internet Trends report shows that over 90 percent of
people keep their mobile phones within three feet of them, twenty-four hours a
day. A May 2012 Harris poll in the United States found that 53 percent of people
regularly check their phones in the middle of the night after they’ve already
gone to bed, and a surprising and slightly disturbing number of people check
their phones while on toilet…
This online-all-the-time mentality pervades every area of
one lives. Two 2012 surveys, one from Yahoo! And the other from Gazelle,
revealed the following eye-opening data:
§ 25 percent of women would give up sex for a year to
keep their tablets.
§ 15 percent of all survey respondents would give up
their cars to keep their tablets.
§ Nearly 15 percent of all survey respondents said
they’d rather give up sex entirely than go for even a weekend without their
iPhones.
A
2012 TeleNav survey asked people which of life’s “little pleasures” they would
rather do without for a week, instead of parting with their phones:
§ 70 percent would give up alcohol.
§ 21 percent would give up their shoes.
§ 28 percent of Apple product users would go without
seeing their significant others; 23 percent of Android users agreed.
A
recent study from McCann Truth Central claimed that 49 percent of married moms
would give up their engagement rings before they would part with their mobile
phones. And a 2012 study from Harris Interactive revealed that 40 percent of
people would rather go to jail for the evening than give up their social media
accounts.
So,
this is the world we live in now. Technology is almost everywhere and has come
to dominate our lives. So much so, in fact, that we’ve starting to see people
yearning to be less connected and trying to implement rules, structure, and
discipline in both their own and their families’ lives, to ensure that all this
connectivity does not come at the expense of relationships, skill development,
and manners.
It’s going to become increasingly
important to find that balance, because in the next decade we’re going to see
something even more extraordinary. Everyone
and everything will be connected. There will be no division anymore between
online and offline.”
[Long excerpt from Dot Complicated: Untangling Our Wired Lives
by Randi Zuckerberg (Harper-Collins Publishers, 2013), page 60-63. Buy this
book!]
Let technology supposed to help us, not lord it over
us.
Let technology fill our lives with meaning, rather
than fear.
Let technology empowered us, rather than overwhelmed
us.
Let technology become tools of opportunity to glorify
God in everything,
rather than promote insecurity.
THINK BIG.
START SMALL. GO DEEP.
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