by in Opinion
Communication is key in our everyday lives, and technology has made it easier. Even phone calls are a thing of the past. With e-mails, SMS text messages, and instant messages, there isn't a need to actually speak with people anymore.
But this has made everyone in this world just a bunch of anti-social morons.
by Stephanie Scalise in Opinion
Students have come a long way from scribbling on scrolls to typing on keyboards. Technology continues to enhance students' education through production, enhancement of visuals, and research methods.
Just a generation earlier, dissertations and essays were typed on a typewriter, and if a mistake was made, pages had to be started over.
by Nicholas Lane in Opinion
The world is becoming evermore dependant on technology.
Making human life easier sounds like less work for human beings. Less work for human beings sounds like a larger dependence on someone or something else to do the work for us. That work has fallen on the technology that the world continues to create.
by Stephanie Scalise in Opinion
So, here's the scoop: I'm graduating. In my three short years at NDNU, I've met friends I can never forget and had experiences that I never thought were possible.
As I leave NDNU, I take a unique set of values that no other school could have instilled. Often, I reflect about those "couldas, wouldas, and shouldas.
by Natalie Albanese in Opinion
All of the hot new gadgetry of the iPhone and social networks like Facebook and Twitter have caused a stir across the globe. NDNU students were asked what technological "gadgets" they love and what they can and cannot live without.
"I can't live without my Blackberry.
by Noelle J. Garcia in Opinion
I never realized how good I have it here at NDNU until I had to give up energy for one entire day. You're probably reading this and thinking, "I can do that!" Sure you can, if you're in your eighties and don't rely on a cell phone, computer, mp3 player, etc.