International and Worldwide
One item of Web 2.0 I hope to increase is the breaking down of borders. I’m old enough to remember the draw of what was called the World Wide Web was the connection across the miles to any country in the world. And it has. I watch soap operas from around the world and tweet with followers from countries I haven’t visited. At one time, the Internet allowed me to facilitate modules for fellow corporate trainers in eleven countries simultaneously. Web 2.0 should be accelerating this further, right? The world online has no barriers, right?
There’s just one catch. We don’t know the slightest thing about each other.
Science-fiction taught us to imagine a world, for example, that spoke the same language through merging of vernaculars or auto-translation. Google Translate is good, but lacks context and cultural sensitivities. Videos like those by Cut demonstrate how different we still are within our own country:
Thanks for the videos! I loved the first one, it was cool to try and guess, even though I could see the people. I didn't get any of them right lol.
ReplyDeleteI agree also, that we are so disconnected from the rest of the world. I'm jealous that a lot of people across the world can speak multiple languages and I am over here with boring ol' American English. Connecting on the web is so much more than we give it credit for.