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Scott Dewing
Jefferson Journal ContributorScott Dewing is a technologist, teacher, and writer. He writes the technology focused column "Inside the Box" for the Jefferson Journal. Scott lives on a low-tech farm in the State of Jefferson. He was born in the same year the Internet was invented and three days before men first landed on the moon. Scott says this doesn't make him special--just old.
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As a technologist, I cannot help but see the world through the lenses I’ve crafted over years of reading, writing, and thinking about technology and its impacts on society, culture, and humanity. I’ll be the first to admit that this can taint one’s view of the world. Sometimes it can lead to insights, other times to myopia.
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As AI increasingly permeates all facets of modern life, we will be bombarded with new challenges at the same time we’re reeling from the challenges that have resulted from widespread adoption of smartphones and the proliferation of social media and online gaming that have, collectively, handicapped our youth.
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It’s another presidential election year and a reminder that our country still doesn’t have a secure, nationwide e-voting system even following all the turmoil of the 2020 election. We have developed all the technologies we need in order to achieve this―data encryption, two-factor and biometric authentication, smartphones, smart cards, cloud computing, high-speed fiber optic connectivity―and yet here we are, four years later, with the same system.
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Once upon a time, a blue planet orbited a white sun at 67,000 mph in a small solar system located at the edge of a large galaxy hurtling through the vastness of the universe’s mostly empty space at 1.3 million mph. The blue planet was billions of years old and had become home to millions of species of plants and animals that had originated and evolved out of the cosmic chaos of a long-ago exploded star. One of the animals on the blue planet eventually evolved to become a hyper-intelligent being that invented language and began naming things. This animal named itself Homo sapiens (“wise man”) and called the blue planet “Earth” and the galaxy it was in “The Milky Way”.
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We’ve become obsessed with tracking everything. Maybe not all of us, but most of us likely track at least one or more of the following: steps per day, body weight, caloric intake, exercise routine, hours worked, sleep.
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The future possibilities for our species significantly changed on Monday, July 16th 1945 at precisely 5:30 a.m. At that moment, the landscape of New Mexico’s Jornada del Muerto desert was engulfed by a flash of beautiful light brighter than a dozen suns.
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American journalism started out weak in 1690 when the first newspaper, Publick Occurrences, was shut down by the British government just 4 days after its first publication.
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Remember the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, commonly referred to as HIPAA?
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The phrase “tragedy of the commons” was coined in 1833 by the British economist William Forster Lloyd. He used the term to describe the negative outcome…
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In 1965, futurist and writer Alvin Toffler coined the term “future shock” to describe the “shattering stress and disorientation that we induce in…