Traditionally, constraints in communication prevents us from really knowing things the moment they happen. Even the phrase “hot off the press” means nothing to us nowadays – just take a saunter down to your neighborhood’s 7-Eleven store at 3 in the morning, and you’ll notice freshly-stacked copies of the day’s newspapers. If that doesn’t strike you as unusual, just consider that the articles in them were probably only edited hours ago. So the paper over which we peruse with our cup of morning java isn’t really freshly pressed, is it?
Enter: the digital age.

"Mommy, what's happening in the world today?"
It has obliterated the formerly-pertinent barriers of time, distance and speed. The news of pop superstar Michael Jackson’s passing, for instance, was so quickly disseminated, that a crowd gathered outside the UCLA Medical Center (where he was admitted earlier) within minutes. It is a good indication of how information transmission has evolved into a form so rapidly fluid, that halfway across the globe, we seem to get these updates instantaneously. Well, not quite – since the bytes and kilobytes of information still need nanoseconds to travel through this cyberspace; but it could still be described, with sufficient accuracy, that these packets of information are received almost instantly.
Entertainment website TMZ.com’s news manager Mike Walters described how “1,000 comments (were generated on our story) within minutes. That’s how fast people could write in.” CBS News reported that Google “shut down” for a period of time due to the sudden wave of search activity, perceived as a viral attack (Sieberg, 2009). On the mobile telecommunications front, AT&T recorded a 60 percent spike in cell phone texts - almost 65,000 per second.
Should it come as a surprise then, with the onslaught of digital media that traditional methods of communication have become obsolete? I guess I could still spread the newspaper over my lap while I enjoy my breakfast of fried egg and noodles, but I’m all dosed up on AsiaOne, and my hands are already occupied texting my friends over the latest gossip-worthy tabloid.





