Showing posts with label changes in reading and writing styles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label changes in reading and writing styles. Show all posts

13.10.11

Our Time is Precious: Why Constraints Create Innovations?

Image: Koko Pang
Travelling time is made "shorter", if not busier, with the help of smartphones and touchscreen tablets. This is because our habits have been changing rapidly ever since the smartphone wave. It virtually makes everything mobile. To illustrate, many of us might be one of those whose head faces down on the screen - facebooking, reading blogs, e-books, news, checking email or whatever - when travelling to and from work. And, when we are commuting, what we look for primarily, especially after long hours of work and school, is probably relaxation - something more entertaining that makes you laugh at it, feel better, or just distract yourself from the densely packed areas. 

What short travelling time implies

This trend might have virtually redefined the way we read in the context of new media. In Hong Kong, as overall travelling time is short because of its excellent public transport system (and that we need to drop off at interchange stations very often if we travel by MTR), Hongkongers usually find themselves more comfortable to read and create contents that are presented in a concise way. My observation is, people do make use of their travelling time to respond to friends' photos and statuses, or even upload photos and write about themselves, as this is something more inconvenient to do when they are at work or school. The common thing about these contents is that they all take little time to read. In other words, as smartphones penetrate, an instant reading culture is emerging far more quickly than most of us expect, which in part redefines the way we write in new media.

Moreover, with the constraint of smartphone screen size, it is generally more comfortable to read pictures than texts. Here my assumption is: more people own smartphones than tablets. If we read texts on a smartphone, even if we turn the phone horizontal, quite often we have to enlarge the texts, and keep scrolling left and right in order to see the missing parts. It is much friendlier to browse pictures, however, because switching to the right landscape accordingly would solve everything. And, given relaxation is among our primary reasons of engaging ourselves in new media, the form of contents, unlike traditional media, has to be tailor-made to suit the needs of new media audiences. 

What constraints mean