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Catalysts For Change: Ethics For The Information Age

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
225 views24 pages

Catalysts For Change: Ethics For The Information Age

Uploaded by

J A Y T R O N
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 24

Chapter 1:

Catalysts for Change

Ethics for the Information Age

by

Ing. Dr. Nsor-Anabiah Solomon


Tel: 0206495677
Email: nsoranabiah@gmail.com
Organization of Chapter

• 1-1 Introduction
• 1-2 Milestones in computing
• 1-3 Milestones in networking
• 1-4 Information technology issues

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1.1 Introduction
Information Age
• Characterized by unprecedented access to
information
• Catalysts
– Low-cost computers
– High-speed communication networks
• Examples of advances in past two decades
– Cell phones
– Email
– World Wide Web
– MP3 players 1-3

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1.1 Introduction (cont.)
Technology and Values

• Dynamic between people, technology


– People adopt technology
– Technology changes society
• Different ways people are affected by technology
– Physical changes (e.g., pains accompany the use of
laptops)
– Psychological changes (e.g., cell phones make you feel
safer)
• Technologies can solve problems, create new problems
– Automobile
– Refrigerator and the Ozone Layer
– Low-cost international communication
– Nuclear weapons and radiation the Ozone Layer 1-4

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1.1 Introduction (cont.)

Control over New Technologies

• People can control whether to adopt new


technology
– Nuclear power moratorium in United States
– Nuclear power advances in rest of world
• People can influence rate at which technologies
are developed
– Intellectual property laws (make money from creativity)
– Tax structure (accumulate great wealth)
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1.2 Milestones in Computing
• Aids to manual calculating
• Mechanical calculators
• Cash register
• Punched card tabulation
• Precursors of commercial computers
• First commercial computers
• Programming languages and time-sharing
• Transistor and integrated circuit
• IBM System/360
• Microprocessor
• Personal computer
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Aids to Manual Calculating

• The three important aids to manual calculating are:


– tablet,
– the abacus,
– and mathematical tables
• Tables of logarithms (17th century)
• Income tax tables (today).

• However, even with them manual calculating is


slow, tedious, and error-prone.
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Early Mechanical Calculators
• Calculators (from 17th – 19th century)
• Social Change  Market for Calculators
– Gilded Age (late 19th century America)
• Rapid industrialization
• Economic expansion
• Concentration of corporate power
– New, larger corporations
• Multiple layers of management
• Multiple locations
• Needed up-to-date, comprehensive,
reliable, and affordable information 1-8

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Early Mechanical Calculators

• Calculator Adoptions  Social Change


– Fierce competition in calculator market
• Continuous improvements in size, speed, ease of use
• Sales increased rapidly

– “Deskilling” and feminization of bookkeeping


• People of average ability quite productive
• Calculators 6 faster than adding by hand
• Wages dropped
• Women replaced men
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Cash Register
• Store owners of late 1800s faced problems
– Keeping accurate sales records for
department stores
– Preventing embezzlement from clerks

• Response to problems: cash register


– Created printed, itemized receipts
– Maintained printed log of transactions
– Rang bell every time drawer was opened
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Tabulators  Data-processing Systems
• Punched cards (late 19th century)
– One record per card
– Cards could be sorted into groups, allowing
computation of subtotals by categories
• Early adopters
– U.S. Bureau of the Census
– Railroads
– Retail organizations
– Heavy industries
• Data-processing system
– Receives input data
– Performs one or more calculations
– Produces output data 1-11

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First Commercial Computers
• Precursors of Commercial Computers
– Small-Scale Experimental Machine: CRT memory. A
fully electronic computer system that had both
program and data stored in its memory. It
successfully executed its first program in 1948.
• Remington-Rand
– Completed UNIVAC in 1951
– Delivered to U.S. Bureau of the Census
– Predicted winner of 1952 Pres. Election
• IBM (entered the commercial market in 1953)
– Larger base of customers
– Far superior sales and marketing organization
– Greater investment in research and development
– Dominated mainframe market by mid-1960s
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Programming Languages

• Assembly language
– Symbolic representations of machine instructions
– Programs just as long as machine language programs
• FORTRAN (1957)
– First higher-level language (shorter programs)
– Designed for scientific applications
• COBOL (1959)
– U.S. Department of Defense standard
– Designed for business applications

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Time-Sharing Systems and BASIC

• Time-Sharing Systems (In the early 1960s)


– Divide computer time among multiple users
– Users connect to computer via terminals
– Cost of ownership spread among more people
– Gave many more people access to computers

• BASIC (In the early 1960s)


– Developed at Dartmouth College
– Simple, easy-to-learn programming language
– Popular language for teaching programming
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Other Advances
• Transistor
– Replacement for vacuum tube
– Invented at Bell Labs (1948)
• Semiconductor
– Faster
– Cheaper
– More reliable
– More energy-efficient
• Integrated Circuit : Semiconductor containing transistors,
capacitors, and resistors
– Advantages over parts they replaced
• Smaller
• Faster
• More reliable
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• Less expensive
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IBM System/360
• Before System/360
– IBM dominated mainframe market in 1960s
– IBM computers were incompatible
– Switch computers  rewrite programs

• System/360 (1964)
– Series of 19 computers with varying levels of
power
– All computers could run same programs -
Compatible
– Upgrade without rewriting programs 1-16

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Microprocessor and Personal Computer
• Microprocessor: Computer inside a single
semiconductor chip
– Invented in 1970 at Intel
– Made personal computers practical
• Example of first PCs
– Altair 8800 (1975)
– Personal computers become popular
• Apple Computer: Apple II
– Developments draw businesses to personal
computers
• IBM launches IBM PC
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1-3 Milestones in Networking
• Discoveries in electromagnetism (early 1800s)
• Telegraph (1844)
– A telegraph is a machine used to transmit messages
in the form of electrical impulses that can be converted
into data
• Telephone (1876)
• Typewriter and teletype (1873, 1908)
In 1908 a typewriter was modified to print a message transmitted over a
telegraph line; the inventors called the invention, a teletype
• Radio (1895)
• Television (1927)
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Other Milestones in Networking
• Remote computing (1940)
• ARPANET - Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (1969)
• Email (1972)
• Internet (1983)
– network of networks communicating using TCP/IP
• Broadband (2000)
• Broadband
– High-speed Internet connection
– At least 10x faster than dial-up connection
– Enhanced by fiber optic networks
– South Korea is the world leader in broadband
networking.3/4 of homes have broadband connections1-19
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Other Milestones in Networking
• Newspapers
• Graphical User Interface
• World Wide Web (1990)
– Protocols based on TCP/IP  general
– Later browsers
• Mosaic
• Netscape Navigator
• Netscape Mozilla
• Microsoft Internet Explorer (most popular)
• Search Engines - Google, AltaVista, MSN
• Information Technology
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Information Technology

• Definition: Devices used in creation,


storage, manipulation, dissemination of
data, sound, and/or images
• Examples: Computers, telephones, video
cameras, MP3 players
• People making greater use of IT
– Costs keep falling
– Capabilities keep rising

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1-4 IT Issues
• Email
– Easy way to keep in touch
– Spam has become a real problem
• Web
– Free access to huge amounts of information
– Harmful consequences of some sites
• CDs, MP3s, MP4s
– Free or cheap copies readily available
– May be unfair to musicians
• Credit cards
– Convenience over cash and checks
– Increases possibility of identity theft
– Who owns information about transactions?
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1-4 IT Issues (cont.)
• Telecommuting
– Saves time, allows more flexible work hours
– Can lead to longer work hours
– May result in fewer chances for promotion
• Improved global communication network
– Allow companies to sell to entire world
– Allow companies to move jobs out of their
home countries.
• World Wide Web
– A conduit for democratic ideas?
– Another tool for totalitarian governments? 1-23

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Conclusions

• Revolutionary discoveries are rare


• Information technology has long history
• Rate of technological change accelerating
• Wrong question: “What will the computer
do to us?”
• Right question: “What will we make of the
computer?”
(quoting Seymour Papert)

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