English, asked by rockygowda76, 11 months ago

Report writing on effects of using more technology .

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Answered by MrCoolGuy777
1

Answer:

Do you remember when your parents would scold you for sitting too close to the television? They always warned us that the screens would rot our brains and our eyes would fall out. When cell phones came out, everyone said the radiation from them was damaging our brain cells.

Now, things really aren't much different. New technologies are introduced every single day, and with them new concerns. So what is technology's effect on our health, really?  

Is Technology Making Us Lazy?

When you search for "technology makes us lazy" online you’re bombarded with lists of reasons why everyone believe tech may be holding us back, physically. Of course, not all of the data presented for these arguments are objective. Some are but not all. Let’s take a look at why people believe technology’s effect on our health could be negative.  

A few years ago, The Next Web reported “11 Ways Tech Has Made Us Lazy”. Author and Social Media Editor for the company, Sherilyn Macale, wrote the following blurb about why she believes tech is making us lazy, as a result of entertainment always being at our fingertips:  

“From the comfort of my own apartment, while watching the fight on Pay Per View, I can pause mid-match to double check that my favorite songs on iTunes have been downloaded or my playlists on Spotify synced to my smartphone. I switch inputs on my television to my PS3 which has a Blu-Ray DVD of Avatar in to watch one of my favorite clips. I then slip on my XBOX 360 headset to flip inputs again and finish up party chatting with my friends list, as they’ve been waiting for me to play a session of Call of Duty with them. After a quick round, I flip back to Pay Per View, resume the fight, and tweet out what’s happening on screen like a sports announcer, amusing myself with the flood of replies.”  

Man sleeping on a couch shows technology's effect on our healthIt's easy to read this blurb and scoff a little at the scenario. Is anyone really switching back and forth from their PPV to iTunes to their PS3 to their XBOX and back? Maybe, but probably not as commonly as Macale is sensationalizing it in this article. Also, this was in 2011, before the Hulu-Netflix-Amazon Video wars, and Apple Music versus Spotify became a thing. A lot has changed since then. For one, our access to entertainment has only become easier and more immediate.  

In contrast to Macale's point, Author Lauren Lanna for The Odyssey recently wrote about why technology does not make us lazier. Rather, it offers us opportunities to actively seeking out new knowledge, to be more engaged with the world and others rather than less. In her article titled, Technology Does Not Make Our Generation Lazy, she explains that technology allows users to have access to more information than imaginable with just the click of a button:  

"I have any information I could ever need at the touch of a finger, and I can spend less time clarifying and researching facts, and more time learning new things that are interesting and unique to me. I work just as hard at school and at my job despite my cell phone use on breaks and free time. In many ways my phone is like an add-on to my arm, but I don't use it to cause problems or seem uninterested in the world around me. In fact, many times its the other way around. - And just because I may use more technology in my daily life does not mean I am lazy."  

So, can all of this ease-of-access actually make us lazy? Does it make us more productive? That may be up to us, ultimately. We make the decision every day as to whether or not we should research something new, take a walk, or watch Orange is the New Black. A great number of us may choose the walk, while some will choose Netflix. Is that really the technology's fault? You tell me.  

marks as brainliest please

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