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Person to person
communication was pretty simple last century. There was the letter, or
as we call it today, "snail mail" and the telephone. Our address book
contained the physical address of our friends and their phone numbers.
It is amazing to me how much we actually got done, we won wars and went
to the moon and created the greatest county on earth, and all without a
single bit of digitized information.
To someone who grew up in the last 20 or so
years that must seem quaint. They probably can't imagine life without a
cell phone, email, IM and a dozen other ways of communicating with their
fellow human beings. I am beginning to wonder myself. Someone asked me
the other day if I "Twittered", I thought it was a neurological
disorder. No, it was a form of micro-blogging, another way to stay in
touch in the 21st century.
So just how many ways can you keep up to the
minute with your "friends" today, let me count the ways. And this is by
no means a complete list.
Email has been around since the beginning of
the internet. By the late 80s' everyone with a computer had an email
account. Now we could send a message to anyone with a computer and they
could reply. This was a momentous social change. It significantly
accelerated the communication between people. Plus we could "attach"
stuff, like pictures of the grandkids, or an excel spread sheet to our
email.
In it simplest form, a blog (web log) is an
online diary or journal. Prior to the mid 90's online forums and BBS
(bulletin board systems) allowed people to have running conversations on
a web site with a moderator to keep order. Then some high profile
personalities started to keep online diaries which allowed comments from
anyone to be posted, and the blog was born.
Today blogging is a serious force to be
reckoned with. Anyone can start a blog and thousands do every day.
Currently there are an estimated 12 million blogs and about 57 million
blog readers. These numbers are deceiving, since it appears that only
about 20% of blogs are active and 60% to 80% of blogs are abandoned
after one month. As one commentator put it "the average blog has the
life span of a fruit fly."
Yet this kind of personal communication has
again changed the social landscape. Anyone can comment on anything from
personal hygiene to politics and anyone can respond with their take on
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the subject. Some bloggers have aspired to
become journalists and others are just looking for some virtual
recognition, either way we are more in touch.
Personal communication has taken another leap
with the creation of social networking sites like Face Book and My
Space. These sites and many others like them allow virtual conversation
to take place between friends on an almost instant basis. I will
confess, I don't know much about them which only proves my age. But
without a doubt, and from now on a person's identity will forever be
linked to their Face Book page and their list of friends.
Will someone please explain to me why someone
would attempt to communicate by text using a device no bigger than a
deck of cards and with a "Key Board" consisting of 12 keys? At a minimum
IM (Instant Messaging) requires tiny fingers, superb eye hand
coordination and a new language consisting of thousands of newly created
letter combinations to represent real words. And another thing since
this device is a Phone, why not just TALK to the person? LOL
The ultimate "Personal" communication for the
21st century must be in Second Life. In this enormous virtual world
millions of people interact with millions of other people, one on one.
The whole range of human activity can now take place in a virtual
environment. You can be anyone you want and "talk" to a dragon or a real
priest, free of the most basic limitation of our human form. In a sense
this is probably personal communication on a level never seen before.
Twitter is the newest "form" of communication.
It answers the pressing question, "What are you doing NOW?" As you go
through your day, you constantly update your "Twitter" page with mini
blog entries no more than 140 characters long. Now anyone who is logged
on to your page can tell what you are doing, what you are feeling, who
you are with and any moment in the day. Why didn't I think of that? It's
obvious that I would want to know all the mundane details of all my
friends' daily lives.
Face time means actual face to face talk. The
words, the eyes, the body language, the context, all convey meaning. Let
me know when we can do that online. Until then, don't look for my
Twitter page.
This article has been provided to APCUG by
the author solely for publication by APCUG member groups. All other uses
require the permission of the author (see e-mail address above).
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