« Blog Home
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
Loading ... Loading ...

So here we are, 2008. We have Google, Flickr and Facebook. We have YouTube, MySpace and Twitter. We have more IM clients than you can shake a stick at, and enough Web content to sink a flotilla or two. How, I ask you, is anyone expected to cope? If your cell phone isn’t ringing, your smart phone is beeping, your IM is flashing, someone wants to see you on Skype and don’t even talk about your inbox mail count.

Google et al are all trying, very, very hard, to grab your eyeballs, your traffic, your airtime minutes. Content is king and the devices and sites that generate and transmit it are rising to the top of the sexiness pile. Problem is, half of what’s being generated is utter garbage. Vernon Koekemoer, bless him, is the poster child for the information consumption era — he’s been all over the digital world because he caught someone’s imagination. And while you may think it’s nice to have everyone and his dog in your address book, chances are these people are cluttering up your inbox, your Facebook, and your head, with more of said garbage.

I was horrified, very recently, to see someone on a mailing list laud someone else’s posts as well–researched, merely because he was exposing most of the list members to information they’d by and large not seen before. This would be fine, even fantastic, if said information wasn’t the worst kind of spin–doctored propaganda.

I’m prepared to bet, in a currency of your choice, that the people and companies that rise to the top in the next decade will be those that are most adept at consuming information. And by consuming I don’t mean marking all as read and hitting delete. I mean scanning, filtering, processing and analysing information to determine what is useful, what is useable, and what really needs to be consigned to the bonfires of history.

Taking information and turning into knowledge is neat trick that, as yet, all of our IT cannot do for us, not on any mainstream level at least. If we are to survive and thrive in the Information Age, we need to do this for ourselves, and become expert at it. We also need to teach our children to do the same. Given the rate at which we’re generating new content, more and more sophisticated means of dividing the dross from the data are going to be needed. And soon.




Related Posts

5 Responses to “The rise of the information consumer”

Samantha Perry … well done!!!
Nice to see meaningful, intelligent, visionary stuff
like this coming “Out Of (Darkest) Africa” … for the time being anyway.

(Report abuse)

Max Bannister on May 18th, 2008 at 8:14 am

Thanks Max :-) :-)

(Report abuse)

Samantha Perry on May 19th, 2008 at 6:17 pm

This is all true, I must agree it is becoming more and more easier to get online and host all your site, have a look at http://www.vpsinabox.com now you can have your own server in South Africa.

(Report abuse)

SA Info Man on May 20th, 2008 at 10:18 pm

Dear Samantha,
Your blog on the rise of the information consumer caught my eye, and you are right to ‘wave the red flag’ at the excess of ’stuff’, which is indiscriminately passed on as information, often delivered whether asked for or not. We suffer from ‘information-overload’ because we have lost control over what we choose to ‘consume’. The electronic era has made it almost impossible to select only the information we need or want, without receiving at the same time, a plethera of advertisements, or being added to some marketing list, often without our knowledge or consent.
In the business world, information is (or should be) a valuable asset, (even if it does not appear on the Balance Sheet). It should be treated with the same respect as - say - the company finances. Unfortunately, in many businesses, employees simply accept the information they are supplied without questioning whether or not they need it, and, indeed, whether or not it is accurate or complete. I am convinced that much information circulating within companies as ‘business intelligence’ (for example), does more harm than good because it is unreliable and/or misinterpreted. Decision-makers (and that’s all of us!), are put at great risk if we have no way of verifying how reliable our information is.
Information is (often) a dangerous thing.
Alan Snow, Infoblueprint

(Report abuse)

Alan Snow on May 22nd, 2008 at 12:03 pm

@Alan - I couldn’t agree more.

(Report abuse)

Samantha Perry on May 23rd, 2008 at 10:53 am

Leave a Reply

All comments must be approved by our editors, click here to read the editorial guidelines for comments. Please allow some time for our editors to approve your comment after posting.

Send me the Thought Leader daily newsletter

profile
Samantha Perry is an ICT journalist based in Johannesburg. She has been covering the ICT industry for the last nine years, and believes she's nearly due for a long-service award, and possibly a medal. She has worked in a permanent capacity for the likes of Computerweek, CRN and Computing SA (Editor), and on a freelance basis for BMI-TechKnowledge, Telkom and the Corporate Research Foundation amongst others. She is currently the Features Editor for ITWeb Brainstorm and ITWeb Online. In her spare time she attempts to be a nice, cheerful, people-person.
Technorati RSS
Samantha's links
ITWeb Brainstorm
ITWeb Brainstorm is a monthly IT magazine for decision-makers and other intelligent people. I'm one of its intelligent contributors. :-)
ITWeb Online
South Africa's technology news leader.
more posts
One of the primary goals of any serious journalist is to take whatever they are writing about, and cover it in plain, simple English so that anyone, r...
Facebook, bless it, has (dare I say it? ) revolutionised the online world for many people. Parents in particular. In addition to worrying about what t...
Most corporates have terabytes of unstructured data floating around, which they do not know they have. New legislation is about to make life very inte...
I've been covering IT, and its newer acronym, ICT, for nearly ten years. In that time I've had the joy of watching the trends go around, and around. I...
latest activity
Blog Statistics
Total reads 2502
Total comments 22
Samantha's tags
advertisement
All material copyright of the author, or the Mail & Guardian, unless otherwise specified
Author Login
Afrigator