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Thursday, December 2, 2021

Communication technology and types of Communicate

Communication technology and types of Communicate

Communication technology
Communication technology and types of Communicate

Communication technology is the activity of communication from one place to another through any device. Communication technology makes it easy to communicate quickly and at the same time talk to each other directly on the screen.

Communication technology medium or type

1. Telephone:

Alexander Graham Bell revolutionized the way he communicated with his patent by telephone in the 18th century. Advances in technology over the past century have replaced the original design of heavy hardware and metal wiring with light microcrystals. These advances have helped people communicate remotely, from landlines to wireless. Around the world, millions of people can talk to each other, expand their businesses, and improve their relationships.

2. Radio:

In the early 1860s, James Clark Maxwell predicted the existence of radio waves. James Clark Maxwell's predictions came true with the successful display of electromagnetic waves by Heinrich Hertz in 1886. In 1895, Guglielmo Marconi became the first person to receive radio signals. By October 1902, he was able to telegraph the letter "S" across the English Channel, becoming the first successful transatlantic radiographic message.
In 1906, Reginald Fessenden broadcast the first AM radio.

3. Television:

Television is an electronic system for simultaneously synthesizing transient images of a stationary or moving object over a wire or through space through a device that converts light and sound into electric waves and converts them back into visible light rays and audible sounds.

4. Internet:

The Internet is an electronic communication network that connects to computer networks and organizational computer facilities around the world to exchange information very quickly from one place to another. Social media is making new history in communication technology.

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Clay Sharkey, a social media theorist, is an associate professor at New York University. According to the university site, he has gained a reputation for research and writing on the social and economic impact of Internet technology. In 2020, he was named one of the top 100 global thinkers in Foreign Policy. He made the remarks on the Ted Platform in June 2009. 


Today we will hear the story of changing the landscape of media. For those who have a message and want to spread that message around the world, we will see what this transformation of the medium means. I will paint a picture of this radical change in the medium by telling a few stories.
So, let's get started. Presidential elections were held in November. Surely you have heard about this in the papers. Everyone was talking about the possibility of voter repression in some parts of the country. As a result, a plan was made to capture the voting time on video. Citizens who have phones that can be photographed or videotaped will capture the environment and images of their polling stations. The real goal is to prevent voters from casting their ballots or to try to suppress them. Everyone will upload pictures or videos to a specific location. This is called civic observation. This means that citizens will not only cast their vote but also ensure the transparency of the vote as a whole.

So, it's a system where we all seem to be in one place. The main issue here is not technology, but social cohesion (social capital). No technology is socially attractive in the beginning. All the new technologies that come with the flash of light want to say, their creation revolves around society. But not everyone is frozen in the beginning. When everyone embraces technology, it becomes important. As the media becomes increasingly social, the creation of innovation can now happen anytime from anywhere. And by accepting that new invention, people can easily think, we are all here together.

Then we see a media picture where change is happening everywhere, something new is being created, which is spreading from one place to another. This is a huge transformation. The time that we are living through, the time that this generation is witnessing through history, is the most golden time in human history to acquire expressive ability. Sounds like an exaggeration? I am arguing for the claim.

In the last 500 years of history, we have seen a total of four stages, where the media has changed in such a way that it must be admitted that it is equivalent to a 'revolution'. The first is popular. The invention of the printing press. Movable type (movable type), oil-based ink — somewhat complex, but thanks to this invention, printing became a reality. The printing press changed the whole picture of Europe. This revolution took place in the middle of the fifteenth century.

Two hundred years ago. Innovation came in two-way communication. Here comes the technical medium of conversation: first the telegraph, then the telephone. Then came the technology of slow, short message-based conversations, followed by the technology of voice-based instant (real-time) communication.

One and a half hundred years ago, another revolution took place. In addition to printing, a means of recording was invented. First, it was possible to capture still images, then words and moving images. However, these were the technology to hold in one or another physical object.

Centuries ago we saw another revolution. The technology of transmitting sound and images through the spectrum of electromagnetic frequencies through the air. Radio and television came.

As the medium of communication becomes increasingly social, the creation of innovation can now take place from time to time from anywhere

Until the twentieth century, this was the media landscape. Many of us have grown up with these technologies, we have become accustomed to using them.

But there is an interesting contrast between these means of communication. The medium that is most effective in creating conversations is not as effective in creating groups. Again, the medium is very useful in creating groups, it is not so good in creating conversations. If we want to talk, what do we do to talk to someone else? And if you want to talk to a group, you have to come up with the same message for everyone, you have to give that same message to everyone in the group. For example, from a broadcast channel or a printing press, we spread the same message for everyone. Such a communication system was with us in the twentieth century.

And that is what has changed now. Consider Bill Cheswick's Internet Map. When you look at the map, it looks as if a peacock has matched Peckham across the screen. Chesapeake identifies the range of individual networks, then converts them into color codes. The Internet is the first medium in history where both groups and conversations can run simultaneously. Phones allow us to communicate ‘one-to-one’. Television, radio, magazines, books — these are how one-to-many people can communicate. And the Internet has made it possible for people to communicate with each other. For the first time, the media is instinctively supporting such conversations. It's a huge transformation.

The second change is also quite significant. Since the means of communication have all been digitized. As a result, the Internet has become the vehicle of all other mediums. Phone call technology has been added to the internet, magazines have come to the internet, movies have not been left out either. This means that every medium has come close to other media due to internet technology. Think differently, the means of communication are no longer the source of information, but they are now the arena of collaboration, coordination, or connection. Because, seeing or hearing — in any case, people can now connect and continue talking to each other at the same time.

The third is another big change. Those who used to be mere readers, listeners, or viewers, in Dan Gilmore's language, the 'former audience', are no longer just consumers, they are now individual creators. Whenever someone new is added to the world of communication, a message writer gets involved. Using a phone or computer, one can create something with the same device as he is receiving. The thing is, he bought the book and got the printing press himself for free. If you have a phone in hand, you can turn it into radio if you know how to press the right button. This is a huge change in the world of conventional media. The Internet is constantly changing as the means of communication become more social. How to make better use of the Internet is changing.

 

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