May 18, 2013

Why Do The Research?

You have a theory.  You wish to prove it.  Will oil burn longer than gas?  How will you find out?  You will ignite the same amount of oil and gas and see which one burns longer and you will have your answer.  Did you just do research???

Anytime anyone invented anything or found a better way to do something in this world, from the invention of the wheel, to the latest computer gadget, someone did the research.  If the caveman had not started out with trying to roll a square piece, he would have never figured out that he had to smooth out those corners in order to get it to work.  He did the crudest form of research known to man, trial and error.  Today, that same principle applies to the most sophisticated software analysis.  The software must be tried in different situations, on different computers, with different programs, to see where it works and where it does not, thus giving the inventor or creator the information he needs to make it work the way he wants it to.

Research keeps us safe.  When experiments are done under controlled environments, everything we use today is safer.  It is a lot more effective to test a seat belt in a factor with a dummy, than to have anyone hurt by learning it was defective in the first place.  It is also essential to test things like medications or food additives before actually giving them to people for consumption.

Research makes us wiser, it gives us information we did not have before.  Documented research makes it possible to build on an invention or idea from the past.  Remember our caveman with his square wheel?  You probably cannot look around the room you are in without seeing a wheel doing something.  He did his research and we benefited from it.

Research And The Eye For Detail

Research used to mean spending hours, maybe even days at the library, looking up different books on the subject you are collecting information on.  Projects were given out weeks in advance, so that everyone had time to go to the library or search the encyclopedia.  Not so much anymore.  While libraries are still important houses of research, we have entered the cyber age.  Turn on your computer, ask a question and get an answer.  It sometimes feels like monkeys in the zoo could perform the same tasks.

There are countless sources on the Internet.  You can find the answer to almost any question you could possibly ask.  Chances are you can find many more answers than you are actually looking for.  The answer to almost any questions will guide you to thousands of Internet sites, maybe even millions of sites.  Where are these sites and where are they getting their answers?  Someone, somewhere has to be doing the research.

While there is no doubt that the use of the Internet has made large volumes of data more accessible to anyone who asks, one still needs to decipher exactly what is needed for your particular use.  Make sure that whatever you are researching that the sites you are using are valid.  Check to see that they have validated their information.  There are sites on the Internet, where anyone can go on and change the information that is given.  Without knowing who has been to the site and what they have changed, the information on these websites cannot possibly be valid.

You may be able to do your research faster, but make sure that you are still as diligent as you need to be to make sure you have accurate and up to date information.   This will make your time well spent, and your information reliable and valid.