Monday, 3 December 2012

Follow me! Twitter....

"On Twitter we get excited if someone follows us. In real life we get really scared and run away." ~Unknown via @mozusa
     Twitter, what a weird word. I wonder why they chose a bird as their symbol? We can't argue with statistics, in 6 years twitter has 140 million strong users (Mashable, 2012) That's pretty impressive. I think the appeal of twitter lies in the short character restrictions that are imposed on it's users. People either have to be dramatic, or funny, or morose, but only in 140 characters. How limiting is that? If someone told you that you had to sum up your entire life in 140 characters do you think you could do it?
     I am the first to admit, I do actually have a twitter account. Do i know how to use it? No sir! I thought a hash tag was a game u played with a deep fried breakfast option. And a re-tweet? I wonder if re-tweeting something could open the door for lawsuits, what happens if you tweet something and then say to yourself 'Ooopsie, perhaps consuming 5 litres of tequila before posting that was not the best idea', but by the next morning your drunken tweet has been exposed to 140 million people? There is no deleting your tweet once someone has gotten hold of it and re-tweeted it. What happens if you want to tweet something and don't want anyone else to re-tweet it? I guess there are some things you should never post online, but clearly people do anyway.
     Is twitter a virtual community? In a way I guess it is. Howard Rheingold's view on how cyber space (quick, don your space helmet) will help to eliminate differences in the world sounds lovely. It's great not to have to have a conversation in person with the person who suffers from bad body odour. It's fantastic that people can't judge someone by the way they look before getting to know them via text. But clearly there are limitations here. Hold someones hand on the internet, experience what it's like to touch someone, or even hearing someones spontaneous giggle, all things that are missing from online communities.


 If I could google to find a way
To help me say that I like you
I'd go yahoo make you my boo
Within a day or two

If I messaged, would you read it
Tweet it would you see it
Cause I can't say it to your face
If I post it up on aim
Would it feel the same?
Oh well, here goes nothin'

[Chorus:]
I'm gonna poke you 'cause I miss you
Like you cause I do
Reblog everything that reminds me of you
I hope you get the hint
And if you don't get it yet
I'm tryna say I like you the use of the internet
(John Cedrick - Internet love song)


     In closing, I think twitter could be an amazing tool for advertising, public relations or maybe even updates to the family, but 140 characters is not enough to explain yourself. Perhaps moving all of the clutter out of a status is the key, keep things simple. I do wonder if people will eventually start talking in short bursts of approximately 140 characters to each other in the future. This may be beneficial, remove the complexity of conversations, get right down to it! Perhaps for low context cultures this would work, but definitely not for countries like Japan who take a lot of meaning from body language. Here's your homework; try and describe yourself in 140 characters. Is it a blessing to not have a lot to write, or will people miss so much of who you are due to the word restrictions? I guess your answer would say more about the type of person you are, and opinions would be varied on this one!



References
Mashable, social media 2012, viewed 2 December 2012 <
http://mashable.com/2012/06/05/twitter-for-beginners/
Urban Lyrics, 2012, Internet Love song , John cedrick, viewed 4 December 2012 <http://www.urbanlyrics.com/lyrics/john-cedrick/internetlovesong.html

Video: TEDTalks, Howard Rheingold: The new power of collaboration, viewed 21 November 2012, <http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/en/howard_rheingold_on_collaboration.html>.

Monday, 26 November 2012

Mobile Devices


     How connected are people to their mobile devices? I can only speak from personal experience so I will try and answer this question from my own point of view. I am guilty of taking my children to the park and checking my facebook page. I am guilty of answering the phone while I am eating dinner. I am guilty of having 4 browser windows open with university assignments on one page, facebook on another, and shopping on the following two.
     How much information can the brain absorb in one moment? For information to be remembered after it is no longer present, it has to be represented with either sensory representations or verbal representations (Burton, Westen, Kowalski, 2009, p. 246). If we are for instance only receiving information online, how many other sensors are we missing out on? How much is being retained and how much of our brains are not being used?
     Are we becoming cyborgs? I believe so. If not in a complete sense, there is always a part of me at least, that is not present. My girlfriend came over for a visit and a chat, I counted 5 times she answered a text message while we were talking. I myself checked my messages 3 times. How much of our conversation was actually listened to? I sometimes wonder if we had the same conversation via text message if we would have had more of each others attention?
          Gone are the days where people have to respond face to face. Captain cook didn't email England to let them know he had discovered a country. He had to send a message across the sea, taking months at a time. I guess the question is, are we benefiting from the advancement of technology or not? In some instances of course we benefit. For instance in my case, I can now study at university level because I can do it via correspondence. We can engage in group work, watch lectures, and submit assignments online, which would have been an impossible feat before the introduction of Internet. But I truly believe we are missing some important aspects of life, how many people do you know from younger generations who have a vegetable garden? How many people knot or sew their own clothes? Maybe a few, maybe none. One thing is for sure, family relationships have changed with mobile devices, they have removed some crucial part of human interaction that is quite necessary in human development.
     One thing I know, after reading this week's material for university on mobile devices, I vow to turn my phone off during dinner, leave my phone at home when I take my children to the park, and only have one project at a time opened on my laptop. I am not removing the mobile devices from my life, but I will remove their control of it.


 Brainy quote, Amanda Holden, 2012 <http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/keywords/mobile.html#j2ImLDyvQfWTRjdm.99

Burton L, Westen D, Kowalski R, 2009, Psychology 2nd edn, John Wiley and Sons Australia, Milton Qld

[image] Facebook.com 'Dude, I was there. Don't change the story'.

 http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/keywords/mobile.html#j2ImLDyvQfWTRjdm.99

Friday, 16 November 2012

A quick hello!

Well I suppose an introduction is in order. I'm Mandy, a 30 year old single mother from the south coast of Australia. I have two young sons who keep me both young at heart, and slightly insane. This blog has been created specifically for a university assignment, but I thought perhaps getting to know me personally first would be the best way to start.
I will feely admit I am slightly obsessed with mowing my lawns, and my hobbies include drinking, laughing, playing guitar, singing and pole dancing (in the non-stripping sense). Anyhoo that's enough about me, and I had better get on with reading enough material to make my first uni-related post interesting :) Cheerio!