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Whatsisname... |
Over the past year I have noticed a recurring phrase slip into the lexicon used by both friends and family, to the point where it is growing increasingly more frequent the more time I spend with them. Second to the champion phrase that is “Who would like another drink?”, “Google It!” keeps on popping into conversations where trivial details concerning the subject matter is either forgotten, not known, or temporarily obscured by the dark cloud of alcohol that consumes the brain on nights out. In my circle of friends, forgotten song titles are often cause for shouting “Google It!”, as are the names of forgotten actors, musical notation symbols, authors, countries of origin, years – the list has no end. With the proliferation of wireless portable devices such as Apple iPhones, iPads and Blackberrys though, it is possible to drive the dark clouds far away at the stroke of an LCD screen (or ‘push of a button’ for you luds out there). Gadgets like these come to the rescue when the gaps in our knowledge threaten to blight us on occasions such as this.
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If she turns her fists towards her face to look at her tattoos it will read "leitGoog". |
What is becomingly frighteningly clear is how much people now rely on instant answers from the internet, rather than our own brains. Where the calculator helped kill the skill of arithmetic in today’s generation, Google will slay the art of memory recall in the next. The aptitude of working out a sum or equation has given way to the quick, almost masturbatory self-gratification of bashing a few buttons until the answer is ejaculated on the LCD display. The human race didn’t evolve by wanking, and I am convinced that there is a major point made there which I will leave you to decipher.
To make matters worse, we don’t even plump for educated guesses any more. Let’s say that the exact year in which The Beatles released their seminal LP, Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band has escaped you. As you don’t know the answer you try to work it out, sprinkle a bit of logic or attempt to recall some fragment of information that your memory may have deposited many years ago, ready to be smashed in emergencies such as now. At least you are making a decent stab at the answer, just like working out a mathematical problem. This no longer happens because the gadget-guru amongst your group has already shone the answer in front of your face on his illuminated iPhone. “It’s 1967 mate, look… Googled it…”. “Oh, cheers.”
I am complicit in all of this, though, as I reach for the internet sometimes a bit too soon to get the answers I crave. As an aside, never attempt to get the answers to any health problems you may be experiencing via Google. If you do, you will most certainly self-diagnose cancer so please visit a doctor for a proper consultation. I often wonder how long before the NHS and the hot potato outfit that is Skype combine and deliver an online health service? Online consultancies where a GP can zoom into your testicles via a 3D webcam? I can imagine this happening in the next 10 or 15 years or so and, besides, it has been tried and tested. Leslie Grantham has been successfully using the service for years or so. But I digress.
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The Internet |
Whether we will see an eventual decline in the mental ability of the young and general knowledge eradicated, it is hard to say. When new technology comes along it is easy to blame it for the supposed ills of today’s society, but in this case there may to a case to answer. As I was writing the title for this piece I wondered where the term ‘jack shit’ came from. I think I will save you the trouble… I've Googled It!