This is a world where over 1.6 billion people use the internet to connect, to chat and to experience (Miniwatts Marketing Group 2009). As with every technology, it has its own issues as well. There will always be people who misuse it for their own purposes. That does not take away from what it provides us today and what it holds for tomorrow. Over last few decades the perception of science and technology has seen a fundamental change in television programming. Where once television programming used to delve into science fiction using it as a veil to impart storylines to an audience.
Today’s television audiences are treated to programming which goes much more into the realm of science fact than fiction. In the show “Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles” technology plays a central role in being both the savoir and destroyer of mankind (Nutter 2008). The depiction of the technology is in the form of a terminator, a machine with human skin above a robotic shell. The portrayal of this robotic form in many encompasses the one lesson that technology holds for all of us.
That technology is not fundamentally good or bad, it simply is. It is only when it comes into the hands of human being that it takes on moral characteristics which play into the story. The representation of such science is not only real but palpable. As the existence of robots in the world today give credence to its fantasy (BBC NEWS 2001). It not only serves as entertainment for the masses but also as a warning to act with wisdom and care, in order to safeguard the future. Foley, D. (2008). Does Culture and Social Capital Impact on the Networking Attributes of Indigenous Entrepreneurs?
Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places in the Global , 2 (3), 204-224. The selected journal article covers a research by Dennis Foley which was aimed at determining the impact of cultural and social
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