Free Website Content - 2007 Reflections, 2008 Predictions
The lens through which viewers receive their
news has changed. The images of struggle are no longer frozen
in time; technology has helped preserve and personalize
these conflicts by producing moving tributes to the conflicts
of humankind.
The strife and internal conflicts that marred
the globe in 2006 continued into 2007: Mynamar (Burma),
Palestine and Lebanon all continue to struggle with internal
conflicts in their borders. The differences between 2006
and 2007 are not obvious; however, under close examination,
it is evident that several external struggles have been
transformed into internal conflicts. In 2006, many countries
attempted to influence their neighbors. This was evident
with Iran attempting to influence the turmoil in Iraq, and
Syria attempting to control Lebanon. Both struggles have
evolved into internal personal conflicts in 2007.
While video is not a new technology, the spread
of video-viewing technology in devices like the iPod has
brought the faces of terror into the homes of the western
world. Advances in technology have also encouraged the West
to open both their hearts and wallets, with many sponsoring
children like Youseff, a child with a horribly scarred face.
The same technology that brought Youssef's story to millions
of homes, also helped bring tragedies like the Virginia
Tech massacres.
In 2007, the heavy reliance on technology
forced censorship and spying to the forefront of concerns.
Many western countries accused the communist nation, China,
of cyber snooping and hacking. Also, Russia did not remain
unscathed in 2007, with widespread suspicion and accusations
following the death of Alexander Litvinenko in late 2006.
On a more positive note, North Korea seems to have complacently
agreed to nuclear compliance.
With Armadinajad's (the President of Iran)
comments about homosexuality heard world wide, many found
them comical. He took the "don't ask, don't tell" policy
to an extreme, denying the existence of homosexuality in
the country of Iran. While the Western World smirks, the
repressiveness of the Iranian regime lacks humor. The proximity
and repeated threats against Israel illustrate the region's
unchanged tension.
With the exception of the California Wildfires,
nature spared the US of it's wrath in 2007. However, places
like the Minneapolis bridge were victim to construction
flaws, leading to collapse. Furthermore, the falling dollar
was the victim of economics.
As culture and society have evolved, so have
viruses. We have seen drug resistant TB, and "super bugs".
These drug resistant super bugs are said to rival diseases
like AIDs and have the capacity to decimate an entire population.
While technology has personalized the struggles
of humankind, the internet has become a flood of information
making it more difficult than ever to discern what is fact
and what is fiction. This generation struggles to remember
a world without the Internet. A world without the "web"
is as unthinkable as a world without TV's, microwaves, or
telephones. The next generation will not know a world without
the real time moving images that bring news and information
to their fingertips. Will the globalization and portability
of news make a difference when it comes to tolerance and
understanding? That is for the future generation to decide.
Top 10 Winners Predicted for 2008
1. Video
2. Healthy
3. Long Tail
4. Buy USA
5. Rich Internet / Interactive Web / Semantic Web / Web
Services
6. Aggregate and Attention Data
7. Power of the People
8. Going Green
9. Biometrics and Big Brother
10. Prosthetics / Bionic
Top 10 Losers Predicted for 2008
1. Lead
2. Squat Toilets
3. DRM
4. China
5. Skinny is Out
6. Blockbuster / Netflix
7. Orbo
8. MySpace fell to Facebook
9. Privacy
10. Piracy
More on 2007 Predictions - http://www.small-business-software.net/whats-hot-whats-not-2008.htm
About the Author:
Sharon Housley manages marketing for FeedForAll http://www.feedforall.com
software for creating, editing, publishing RSS feeds and
podcasts. In addition Sharon manages marketing for NotePage
http://www.notepage.net
a wireless text messaging software company.
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appreciated send an email to sharon@notepage.net
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