2. do you
agree or disagree with the main argument? give a answer based on your own experiences?
I definitely agree. I think consumerism is drilled into people in this country
from day one. We learn that we are not good enough if we don't have the latest
and greatest. We want things bigger, better faster, more of them and we want
them right now. Designing things takes too much time. In my experience, I would
much rather buy a video game that design one. This is how I feel about most
things, but I do love to write software, especially web applications. Daniel
Quinn coined the term "taker" to represent people of our culture.
It fits perfectly because most Americans take and never contribute to the production
of more of what they are taking except in a monetary way because they have to
pay for what they are taking.
3. enumerate
in which situations
3.1. you
acted as a designer/active contributor
I have worked in projects in school such as mock design projects in software
engineering and 3d game programming. I designed a web application at work so
that students and alumni can register for the Greater Denver Teacher Fair online.
I have also gotten the source code for a PERL web forum / bulletin board and
modified it to meet the needs of my cousin, Seth, who works in the field of
interactive computer art. I was motivated here be the experience of understanding
thousands of lines of PERL code and making it do what I wanted it to do. I also
contributed to the forum set up by that particular bulletin board program which
was called YaBB or Yet Another Bulletin Board. I had spent so much time with
it that I felt obligated to help others so they wouldn't have to go through
the same frustrations I did. I try to engage in prjects like this every once
in a while to improve my programming experience and knowledge so that my transition
into the real world won't be such a shock. The Greater Denver Teacher Fair project
has been a huge learning experience as I have learned about the Jakarta Tomcat
servlet container, the incorporation of SSL into a web application, the Jakarta
Struts framework, Enterprise Java Beans, Java Server Pages, and the Java programming
language in general. What I love about it is that the Struts framework is really
designed so that building new functionality into a current system is very intuitive.
The application has grown exponentially over the last couple of months and the
code is still very manageable.
Our group is planning on doing a project where students can ask questions in
the classroom using their laptop computers with the possibility of extending
it to PDA's. The teacher would have a Tomcat server running on their laptop
and students would submit questions which would be grouped by time slots. The
professor could set up tables in a database which are named for the various
topics to be discussed during the class. Questions would be submitted to this
database and entered into the correct database table based on the time they
were submitted. Then we would provide the teacher with queries and actions that
he/she could perform to analyze and group the questions quickly so that teacher/student
collaboration could be improved.
3.2. you
acted as a (passive) consumer
I would say I act as a consumer whenever I am not acting as a designer or sleeping.
I watch Television, play video games, etc, but I find that when I get involved
in designing and creating things, I am much happier. I love when I get so involved
in a project that it doesn't feel like work anymore. I am creating for the sheer
joy of doing so.
3.3. situations
in which you believe you should have acted differently
There are many times where I have given in to my addictive nature and played
a video game for hours when I could have been doing something more constructive,
but I need that every once in a while. I do experience guilt when I do it, though.
In the realm of computer science I always feel like there is something I should
be doing to improve my skills and knowing this causes a lot of anxiety when
I am wasting time as a passive consumer.