Analysis Of Nicholas Carr´s Is Google Making USupid

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Technology has changed the way people interact with each other. It has also advanced the way people interact with machines due to advances in artificial intelligence. Some commentators think that technology, especially the Internet is making users stupid and hindering their attention. An instance is the way technology has changed the way were text friends and family members using shortened versions of the words. This kind of communication may be seen as affecting the way we write as we prefer to use short forms instead of the whole word.
In his article “Is Google Making Us Stupid”, Nicholas Carr’s piece argues that the Internet has changed the way human beings process information. This argument is reiterated in Thompson’s article “Smarter than …show more content…

In cullington’s article, it is evident textspeak has led to an increase in the neglect of punctuation, grammatical errors, and lack of emotion in formal writing. However, another argument comes up that textspeak is beneficial to students’ writing skills.
Such an argument sees textspeak as a way of self-expression that allows an individual to create a voice that is carefully expressed and constructed. As such, textspeak, as brought by new technologies spurs creativity and supports the utilization of creative thinking skills to allow the students to come up with new ways of expressing themselves. Additionally, Cullington’s article acknowledges the accomplishment of the creation and invention of the new language of communication.
Although one would argue that technology has advanced enormously and changed how people interact, Cullington notes that texting has little to no effect on formal writing. The students that Cullington sought opinion from were not aware that text abbreviations were appropriate for formal writing. She further adds that textspeak will remain harmless as long as language is applied in the correct place rather than in formal …show more content…

In the first article, Carr talks about how the Internet has affected the way human beings process information. Carr talks about how his mind has become errs more since the first time he used the Internet. He acknowledges that people has an enormous access to information as well as its consumption. The three articles complement each other regarding their topic of discussion. Users are changing the way they interact with each other, for instance, through textspeak as explained by Cullington and through social media sites as noted by

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