Friday, August 6, 2010

Wrong Side of the Digital Divide


Having used personal computers since the introduction of the first Apples, and possessing a fair share of digital devices, I thought I was on the right side of the Digital Divide until my ten year old granddaughter showed me the tattoos on her arms last night.


First a disclaimer: I believe, I hope, those tattoos are water soluble drawings, not etched permanently into her skin.


There was a small tattoo on each arm, and together we admired them, she with glee, I with great uncertainty as to how to address her pride in them. So, I settled for a neutral approach, intending to merely describe them and use some humor.


The one on the left arm went well: we agreed it was the sun and that it was cheerful.


The tattoo on the right arm was a small circle with a couple of dots in the middle, and that was what made it clear I have not really crossed the new location of the Digital Divide.


I ventured that the symbol was a button. Immediately she jokingly pressed it with a finger. Now my intention was that we would banter about the incongruity of having a shirt button on one’s arm, but that connotation of “button” was lost on her. Instead, the first meaning of “button” that came to her mind was an icon on a computer screen that you tapped.


To my generation, and even her parents’ generation, digital devices are accessories, used as needed for discrete purposes: work, e-mail, messaging, media. On the other hand her generation has incorporated digital devices seamlessly and pervasively into all aspects of their lives.


I had begun to notice that trend during the vists of my grandchildren. In the course of a typical visit, they tend to routinely weave five or six digital devices into normal social and personal interaction as easily and as naturally as they used speech, drawings, paper, pencils, crayons, stickers, scissors, tv, just a few years ago.


Want to play a game with them? Out comes the Nintendo Wii and they hand you a controller. Ask about their summer activities, they may show you an animation project they did on the computer. Remind them to do their homework, they go online. They eagerly share with you some cool App on their iPod Touch that you haven’t heard about and show you how to use it or play it. They will helpfully enter their new cell number in the address book on your phone . Give them an order for Girl Scout cookies, they send an e-mail to themselves on their laptop then later they send you an e-mail with the amount you owe. They discuss books they have read or downloaded. If you have a device they don’t, they explore it. A topic comes up in conversation and they delve into it with you with a Google search or a Podcast without a hiccup in the flow of conversation. Their music and videos are streamed to their mobile devices. Want to know what the new puppy looks like or who the current boyfriend is? Up pops a picture in Flickr while they describe them to you. Tell them that with your diminishing memory you may forget to send the DVD you promised them, they will say “No problem. I’ll text you”. You refer to some temperature or measurement in a form they don’t understand, they will convert it immediately online. Want to take them to their favorite pizza parlor but don’t know how to get there, they find a route for you on GPS.


They don’t want a candy to take home anymore. They want your iPad.

10 comments:

Unknown said...

Who can blame them? Candy just don't work with wi-fi :)

louis said...

Brilliant insight, Akmal. I love it!

Pak Idrus said...

Louis, does they get all the nutrition on the net too. If yes I want to know the sites so that I could download all the goodies as well. No need to cook anymore.


Take care.

louis said...

Idrus,

Try
nasigoreng.com.my :)

~CovertOperations78~ said...

I really laughed out loud at this one, Louis. When you mentioned 'button', I too thought of a fastener for clothes, and it was incongruous to me that your granddaughter would press a shirt button! Young people nowadays think that riding a bike can be accomplished via joystick and thumbpad, that playing pool means dragging the cursor to point the cue in the direction you want and then clicking the mouse, that you open birthday cards by left-clicking, and kick a football by right-clicking!
Candy still fits into Halloween loot bags better than iPads, though.

louis said...

CO'78,

Perhaps you haven't seen the Halloween loot bags they carry around here: pillowcase size! They could take a desktop, but desktops are old-fashioned to this mobile generation, so I'll have to keep an eye on my iPad :)

I wonder if steering wheels will be the next control to be replaced by a trackpad? Do kids still use joysticks?

To be "all thumbs" is becoming a term of praise, not the old connotation of being clumsy.

Pat said...

Nice one, Louis!

I also wondered why your granddaughter pressed the 'button' - since I was thinking about the buttons on a shirt! Yup, I'm on the wrong side, too :(

They don't want candy? Are you sure, Louis? And doesn't candy include chocolate over there in America?

I cannot believe there is a child out there who'll say no to chocolate!!!

louis said...

Yes, Pat, "candy" includes chocolate over here. And yes, it is rare to find a kid (or adult for that matter) who will pass up a chocolate. But they eat their candy before leaving so their hands will be free just in case that pushover Granddad can be conned into letting them "borrow" his iPad :)

JALAN REBUNG said...

louis,

hahahaha, if i were your grand kid i will definitely do the same ...it's very difficuclt being a grand dad nowadays ya ...

louis said...

They are way ahead. Your turn to deal with them is coming, Rizal, and they'll have all those years to get even smarter! Good luck :)

About Me

My photo
Seattle, United States

Blog Archive