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Professional Issues in Computing

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Title: Professional Issues in Computing


1
Professional Issues in Computing
  • Issues in Computers and Society

2
Issues and Professionalism
  • Blay Whitby, 3R345,
  • blayw_at_.sussex.ac.uk
  • Lectures
  • There are 2 Lectures per week.
  • Wednesday 0900 -1100,  ARUN 401
  • It would be a good idea to participate in all of
    them.
  • Seminars
  • You have one seminar per week.
  • You need to participate in all of them. 

3
Orientation
  • Why study this?
  • Professionalism.
  • You will be involved!
  • What employers expect from graduates.
  • How should we study this?
  • Differences from purely technical subjects.
  • Varying opinions.
  • Many speculations are likely to be be wrong.
  • You may need to acquire new techniques. 

4
Techniques
  • This is not an exhaustive list
  • Your aim should be to become able to form your
    own opinions
  • Develop critical views - requires reading a
    number of differing writers/viewpoints.
  • Show awareness of counter-arguments.
  • Avoid cliches, slogans, and empty phrases - these
    are often ways of avoiding the necessity to-
  • Think. 

5
Some Issues
  • Some comments on predictions.
  • Technological developments.
  • Social implications and consequences.
  • Revolution?
  • Visionaries versus sceptics.
  • Separate the technological from the social.

6
Some comments on predictions
  • How reliable are the forecasts?
  • Are there too many variables?
  • Is it sensible or is it science fiction?
  • Beware the glib, but empty, metaphors-
  • 'The Global Village'
  • 'The Paperless Office'
  • 'The Electronic Revolution'
  • Who will decide?

7
Technological Developments
  • Increase in power (size, speed, etc)of
    processors, with a decrease in cost.
  • Better interfaces - Multimedia, Natural language,
    V.R.
  • Intelligence (" "?) everywhere.
  • Bigger, more comprehensive networks, faster data
    transfer.
  • Systems that replace humans. 

8
Some Comments on Revolutions
  • Media hype or reality?
  • Power.
  • Revolution change of those in power.
  • Little evidence of this.
  • Computer workers' status
  • Does I.T. reinforce power structures? ( ie. The
    opposite of a revolution!)

9
Some comments on Revolutions
  • How much is changing?
  • Work?
  • Leisure?
  • Values?
  • Is the impact of I.T. evolutionary, rather than
    revolutionary?
  • Slow?
  • Gradual?
  • Diverse? 

10
Visionaries versus Sceptics
  • Daniel Bell. - Knowledge freedom intellectual
    advancement.
  • Herbert Simon - Productivity better quality
    better goods and services more satisfaction.
  • Michie and Johnston - Expert systems will solve
    all the world's problems.
  • On the other hand,
  • Joseph Weizenbaum. - Computers cannot be a
    substitute for humans scapegoats for human
    failings.''
  • Neil Frude. - People will prefer machine
    companions to each''other isolation loss of
    social skills no human society.''

11
Social implications and consequences
  • 3 views-
  • 1. Sceptical
  • Computers are (or are about to be) destroying
    human skills and relationships.
  • We are becoming (or will be) dependent on
    technologies which we neither like nor
    understand.

12
Social implications and consequences
  • 3 views-
  • 2. Optimistic
  • More information and knowledge will be available
    to all.
  • Greater access by more people enhances democracy,
    makes deception more difficult
  • Liberation from boring and dangerous work.
  • 3. Separate
  • Social and technological changes are driven by
    different and separate processes. 
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