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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper evaluates changes in technology over time as it concerns communications. How it has affected certain segments, such as people of different races and socioeconomic groups, is also discussed. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA322tek.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
of the first industrial revolution that occurred not too long after the Civil War, through the present that includes significant technological breakthroughs, the impact of technology has significantly affected
that way in which people live. Rather than live by the sundial, people tell time by looking at their digital clocks, computers, cell phones and beepers. Technology has altered society
over the centuries. In respect to communications specifically, technology has had a significant impact on society, the individual and the culture as well. Communications is something that has changed
a great deal over time. During the industrial revolution, when factories were constructed and people flocked to cities for work, communication was still rather antiquated. While the telephone was invented
during the 1870s by Alexander Graham Bell, a great deal of advances in telecommunications was spurred after World War I (Lorenz 45). Radio technologies went hand in hand with telephone
development. It is important to keep in mind that at the beginning of the twentieth century, telephone communication was largely employed by military strategists and not the general public (45).
World War I was perhaps the first large military endeavor to utilize telecommunications technology. The military divisions created during the First World War trenches were commanded from distant headquarters (45).
Speaking over telephone wires had been critical to running the armies. One particular battle during the war was said to have been lost because the German army refused to
use the "new radio equipment" (Lorenz 45). Rather, at the battle of the Marne in 1914, they sent an officer with a message instead and he got lost (45).
Another famous example comes to mind. The Titanic, which sunk just a couple of years before the war, would have not been such a tragedy if they had radio contact.
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