Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

WHEN INFORMATIO­N WAS NOT JUST A CLICK AWAY

- Vidhi Choudhary vidhi.choudhary@htlive.com

When Udayan Mitra, publisher for literary books at Harper Collins first moved to New Delhi from Kolkata in 1996, he bought a 300page book of the map of Delhi published by motorcycle manufactur­er Eicher Motors. “It was very detailed,” recalls Mitra. He describes it as the equivalent of zooming in on Google’s navigation app, Google Maps. This analogy is symbolic of the shift from traditiona­l ways Indians used to find answers in the 1980s and 1990s to Internet firm Google’s search engine taking over our lives since it was launched in India in 2004.

In India, getting basic informatio­n in the pre-Google setup meant spending days at the library, calling in favours to meet experts, use of dictionari­es, directorie­s and globes, reading books and enclyopedi­as, watching quizzes etc. If you were a ’90s kid, chances are Sunday mornings would have included switching on Zee TV at 11am to see Derek O’Brien throwing general knowledge questions at school kids from different parts of the country. “I have not conducted a quiz show for more than a decade now, as I joined politics 15 years ago. Neverthele­ss, Google killed the sport of quizzing! In a way that is good, since quizzing often only means “recall” of knowledge,” says O’Brien. Soft skills like thinking, ideating, writing, speaking can’t be taught by Google and youngsters know that, he adds.

Libraries which were a necessity earlier have become a choice today. Bangaloreb­ased Kavitha Rao, author of The Librarian, published last year, grew up in libraries, accompanie­d by her father, an avid reader. “But for my two children reading is associated with the Internet or the Kindle,” she says. Rao is not nostalgic about the fearfully difficult access to informatio­n in those times and the laborious process of cross referencin­g books and taking notes. “It used to be very difficult. I don’t think the Internet is a curse. But today libraries still need to be there alongside the Internet. A healthy mix is required,” she says.

Mitra agrees that access to informatio­n to millions has become much easier, but the informatio­n itself lacks depth. “The informatio­n on the Internet is not nuanced, it’s basic and not deep enough or layered enough to get a holistic understand­ing of any topic,” he adds.

Dictionari­es and globes have become invisible. “Vocabulari­es are shrinking,” says Mitra. In 2012, Encycloped­ia Britannica stopped production of its iconic multivolum­e book sets to focus on digital encycloped­ias. This was another trend that marked the shift and the impact of technology on everyday lives.

Siddhartha Basu, creator of the popular television show Kaun Banega Crorepati (KBC), believes the world wide web and powerful web browsers have triggered a knowledge and informatio­n revolution which has few precedents in human history but needs to used with restraint. “But the slope has got slippery too. You have to know how to navigate these vast oceans of informatio­n, sift the grain from the chaff, informatio­n from misinforma­tion, disinforma­tion and propaganda,” he explains.

 ?? HT FILE PHOTO ?? Libraries, which were a necessity earlier, have become a choice today.
HT FILE PHOTO Libraries, which were a necessity earlier, have become a choice today.

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