Yet, every major aspect of the Internet builds on the strengths of those prior media forms.
Cultural Acceleration
The development of technology has allowed for cultural acceleration, as each media form starting with the telegraph represents an improvement in the speed and/or scope of communication (Carey, 2010). The telegraph separated transportation from communication, which was the first step. The telephone increased speed further, and wireless telegraph set the foundation for later wireless technologies. Radio and television, for example, were based on wireless broadcast, which enabled communications to reach a broader audience. Where the telephone and telegraph introduced an accelerated pace to communications, the impacts of any one given communication were individual. News of the Titanic sinking, for example, was carried through a network of different messages on different media (Carey, 2010). Such large-scale impacts of communication on society became commonplace with radio. Television had yet more potency as a communications medium, the result being further cultural acceleration simply because the images contained in television had more direct impact on the audience.
The Internet represents a convergence of all of these forms, and the result is even greater cultural acceleration. In modern society, information overload can occur (Carey, 2010) because the human body and mind has yet to catch up to the rapid pace of information, which today travels not only at high speed, but also contains the full wealth of content that has been developed over the past hundred-plus years since the separation of transportation and communication began.
For most of the time period since the invention of the telegraph, a significant portion of communication still relied on elements of transportation. Telephones still required wires,...
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