palec
Well-known
I've just read this article:
Your Computer Really Is a Part of You
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/03/heidegger-tools
There is a research how people reacted to malfunction of mouse while they did some test tracking.
And I immediately become thinking how the shutter lag, autofocus hunting or EVF refresh rate relate to my own inability to identify with certain cameras and the reasons why I like to work with rangefinders. If the tools are parts of us, the optical viewfinder does not make me feel disconnected with my surrounding. But this might be just me and someone else feels just comfortable with the new breed of EVF cameras.
My intention is not to start another "versus" debate, but to question how really tools we use (and food we eat 🙂 influence ourselves.
Your Computer Really Is a Part of You
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/03/heidegger-tools
There is a research how people reacted to malfunction of mouse while they did some test tracking.
Computer malfunction made test subjects aware of it — what Heidegger called “unreadiness-at-hand” — and the computer was no longer part of their cognition.
And I immediately become thinking how the shutter lag, autofocus hunting or EVF refresh rate relate to my own inability to identify with certain cameras and the reasons why I like to work with rangefinders. If the tools are parts of us, the optical viewfinder does not make me feel disconnected with my surrounding. But this might be just me and someone else feels just comfortable with the new breed of EVF cameras.
My intention is not to start another "versus" debate, but to question how really tools we use (and food we eat 🙂 influence ourselves.