Friday, January 30, 2009

For Computer Media Communications (as a class), this student utilizes the capabilities of a computer in the same way done outside of a scheduled class. But first, a little historical recap may be needed.

This student’s family started out without a computer at first, shockingly enough. Then, as the new millennium rolled around, the folks finally received a computer. Unfortunately, it ran on dial-up, which meant that there wasn’t much to do with it, due to how slow and complicated the whole system was. Thankfully, the use of dial-up didn’t last, the folks would later get DSL, which is—by far—loads better and has sustained the folks to this day (considering they’re not as computer-orientated as this student is).

This student himself though just recently acquired a high-speed laptop that runs on Windows Vista Home Premium, which is even faster than DSL (at least when somewhere with wireless connectivity) and a welcome sight for this student, considering that a lot of schoolwork and even things done for fun (for example, social networking, online gaming, online communities, etc.) are done via the computer and so, as such, a relatively fast computer was desired to keep up the rapid expansion and growth of technology in general (or at least, desired to keep up with the demands of the Internet when this student utilized it).

In terms of usage, this student uses computers for both work and play, considering that assignments can be finished quicker if they can be emailed to teachers (especially so if the teachers find that a complication arises and they cannot be physically present to teach), that teachers themselves are also starting to use the Internet to help them do what they do (that is, teachers are using online capabilities more and more to help themselves and the students they teach by placing important assignments, course documents, syllabi, and other important school-related documentation on online systems such as Blackboard), and that fun online activities occupy a lot of this student’s free time. Such fun activities would include having a part in an array of online communities dedicated to this student's interests, playing online games, checking emails, and keeping up with accounts on DeviantArt, YouTube, and various other online places, among other things.

3 comments:

  1. what is DeviantArt? can you use this site for review if it fits any category or you may open a new one?

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  2. hmmm, interesting that this student uses an impersonal manner of writing. can this student explain the choice please?

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  3. DeviantART is a free site for people to create, promote, and share art with others. It runs in the same fashion as an online community or social network, though, in terms of how people interact.

    My choice to use an informal style of writing comes from my background. Really, aside from course papers that basically dictate how someone is to have them written, I often write in the same manner that I talk, albeit that I am more social online than I am in person, which can be attributed to my introverted personality trait.

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