Mobility, Portability, and Placelessness
by Joseph Kupfer
Introduction: A Danger of Electronically Mediated Experience
A few months ago I was sitting in a Chicago airport, waiting to make my
connecting flight. Everywhere I looked, people were talking on cell phones,
but the man across from me had gone one better. He had a cell phone and
a laptop computer. He was talking on a conference call with two people
who were at two different locations as they edited a document that appeared
on his laptop. It was a contract that they would soon e-mail to yet a
fourth individual for her agreement. In the midst of the conferring, the
man across from me broke from the contract to look up something on an
Internet Web site. He was able to access data that was needed for the
contract work. There is no doubt something astonishing and wondrous about
four people hooked up, converging on a document that exists—well,
where? Nowhere yet, except in that fanciful ether called cyberspace. Although
we need to describe this dimension in familiar language, we realize that
the term is just a metaphor. There is no space in cyberspace and no time
either for that matter.
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