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convergence

Convergence
1. the act, degree, or a point of converging.
2. Concurrence of opinions, results etc
3. Maths. The property of or manner of approaching a finite limit, esp of an infinite series: conditional convergence.
4. The combining of different forms of electronic technology, such as data processing and word processing converging into information processing.

(From Collins English Dictionary, 1991)

The merging of different forms of technology – such as Internet access on television and email access on mobile phones – will be a vital part of technological advance this century. But the definition of convergence will also be likely to change to incorporate the central question: how do we co-exist with technology?

Children as young as six are now taught how to use computers and emails in school. Teenagers are often more net-savvy than their frequently technophobic parents. Many businesses – even accepting the bursting of the dot.com bubble – are now reliant on Internet technology. The reach of this technology extends across our education to our domestic lives to our jobs.

But how will this technology affect us? It will continue to accelerate all aspects of our lives. Information is now more readily available than it ever was. Communication is faster and more efficient – a central demand of businesses and corporate ideology.

Yet the flipside of this progress is that the Internet does not put a premium on accuracy or veracity. The questionable advice available on health sites is only one example. As this democratic medium makes itself open to anyone’s take on reality, the quality of information we digest and learn from may suffer.

Similarly, the challenge posed by email will be to resist its functional qualities rubbing off on other ways we communicate. We coped without it for years. As a communication tool, its impact is arguably to reduce the attention span. We send curt messages containing only basic information. We also send emails rather than communicate verbally. Emails – lacking in tone and emphasis – offer an easy alternative to confrontation or imaginative discussion. The effect this may have on the way we hear and the way we articulate ourselves poses important questions.

The advance of convergent technology in the home (games on TV, videos on the computer, Internet access on the phone, or ad nauseam new combinations) and the school will give children a grasp of how best to marshal it in the workplace. But how will it affect our language? Will we still communicate as creatively as we once did? The technology we use must serve and advance the way we interact with one another, not limit it.


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