Sunday, December 5, 2010
Final Thoughts
1. The idea of digital privacy is practically an oxymoron. To think that one might experience true privacy in a digital world is sort of like imagining a retail store in which theft cannot occur. This is simply unrealistic. Instead, we can use the available tools, such as virtual credit card numbers, secure websites, and unique password verification systems that challenge hackers and might deter them from attempting to steal our information. It will be less feasible as time progresses to prevent corporations from accessing our personal information, though.
2. There is such a thing as being "too connected." People need to get outside periodically! Turn off the devices! Kids need to be kids, not just beings glued to screens in one form or another. Cyberbullying is a side-effect of this, so parents, be proactive. Bring back family game night (remember board games?). Eat dinner together. Toss around the football outside. Technology is awesome, but it's OK to disconnect occasionally.
3. Cloud Computing is serious stuff. The idea of cloud computing isn't exactly new; before it was reality, it was the stuff of science fiction for many years. But there's something sort of scary about my documents not residing somewhere physically... Although I use the term "physically" loosely, of course, since ones and zeros aren't really physical. What I mean is that if cloud computing becomes the rule rather than the exception, we are placing our personal data in the hands of LITERALLY everyone who has access to the web and therefore can potentially damage it. They made a movie about this called TERMINATOR. Perhaps you've seen it?
4. User-generated content is taking over the web. The internet used to be dominated by commercial content...and PORN... but that's commercial content, too, ahem... Anyway, the spectrum has been shifting toward user-generated content with websites like YouTube and Facebook popping up all over the place. With users numbering over half a BILLION, Facebook users post tons of photos and videos daily. Youtube streams hundreds of TERAbytes (not mega-, not giga-, but terabytes) of videos daily. Blogs are becoming increasingly simple to create. The trend is for anyone to have a voice and share their lives with the rest of the world online. This will likely continue.
5. This is only the beginning. We've just entered the 21st century. The potential for the digital world is only just now starting to emerge. Look to science fiction movies to get an idea of where we're heading. The movie Minority Report shows us what computing will probably look like. The "high-speed internet" of today will likely be laughable in 20 years. Clunky PCs will cease to exist. Handheld devices will be even more functional than they are today. Be prepared to adapt.
Thanks to everyone who has been reading my rants and raves each week. And special thanks to those of you who clicked on the PORN link above. Thanks for trusting me to send you somewhere entertaining rather than somewhere inappropriate. I hoped you've enjoyed my attempts to walk that fine line for the past several weeks, and I thank you for staying with me during this experiment of a blog.
Best wishes, and Happy Holidays!
Mike
YouTube Symphony Orchestra
Internet TV
The future of the internet will also change how we view television. We can already record television shows and pull up movies through our gaming systems. You see advertisements for tools which allow you to utilize your television as one big computer screen. My husband can already turn our lights on and off from his computer when we are out of town on vacation. Commercials showing phones that can help you find your car and doing numerous other things that we could only hope would be possible a few years ago are being shown daily.
Who knows maybe in a few years your microwave will also be the television screen in your kitchen.
Final Aha
10/GUI from C. Miller on Vimeo.
It reminds me of some of the technology one might see if they were watching CSI or NCIS. Touch screens where you use your hands and not a mouse or a keyboard. Eventually being able to talk to the computer and the computer understanding exactly what you are asking or instructing it to do.
The future is in the dreams of the next generation. Who would have thought we would have Facebook, Twitter, or any of the other numerous applications. Using a cellphone for more than just making calls.
I know one of the technologies I am enjoying the most and looking forward to where the technology might go is Skype. The ability to talk to my sister in Iraq or my brother as he makes his way to Iraq is a priceless tool. The thought that my brother can continue to communicate with his two young sons while he is serving our country is even more wonderful.
Final Aha
I'm also considering starting a blog. My entire work history has been in the customer service field in retail or restaurants. I get so aggravated when I get poor customer service somewhere and it is primarily because of a lack of training. There are so many businesses that just don't place customer service as a priority. With the changing digital world, it is going to be extremely important for companies to be very good at customer service because customers have so many more options. I think an anonymous blog about this topic would be fun. Sort of like the restaurant critic that used to be in the paper. We'll see.
I also am going to stay more involved in what my kids are doing online. This class has taught me alot about online security and made me put my guard up.
National UnFriend Day Featuring Dr. Oz
I thought this was interesting. In my research for the final project I looked at a lot of studies and journal publications for the Psychology of Cyberspace and Social Networking. Several things I read talked about the "friend" issue with Facebook. One study said that people had seven friends regardless of whether they had 500 on Facebook. Yesterday I checked my Facebook page and saw this posting from one of my "friends". This is not a person I talk to on a regular basis and really don't care to be friends with her. Everything she posts is negative. She posted a negative comment about what the Governor-elect's wife was wearing on election night and yesterday she posted a negative comment about the poor service she received at a certain alteration place and named it specifically. That to me is just wrong. I realized as I read this that every time I see her postings it makes me angry. So why is she my friend on Facebook? Today I deleted her. Facebook should be a place to stay better connected with good friends that have moved away, family that doesn't live close etc. It should not be a place for negative comments about other people. I have 186 "friends" and I've decided that after this class I'm either going to "de-friend" a lot of them or get off of Facebook all together. Maybe a blog or a personal website that is secure to my family and close friends would be a better option to keep my family updated on my kids and what is going on in our lives. Food for thought.
Sunday, November 28, 2010
“Were it not for the Internet, Barack Obama would not be president."
The link to the story was in one of our articles this week.
I'm not sure how I feel about this statement. Don't get me wrong; I have a great deal of respect for Arianna Huffington, and I enjoy reading the Huffington Post periodically for the liberal spin on news, much the same as a conservative might enjoy watching Fox News. The issue I have with Huffington's statement is that I refuse to believe that the general populous of this country could be so ignorant that we would have elected another Republican head of state after 8 years of pure global embarrassment.
I recognize the fact that Obama's campaign would not have been nearly as successful as it was were it not for the huge online presence it forged, and the financial support received through Obama's website was certainly impressive. But are YouTube videos and Twitter accounts the reason we have a competent person as President of the United States?
John McCain's campaign was clearly the more traditional type of political campaign--but I would argue that the traditionally run campaign was not the reason McCain lost to Obama; it was because voters were ready for a change from a TRADITIONAL politician. A millennial-friendly campaign might have helped McCain, but unless he changed himself (and rewrote history), there was no way he was going to win this particular election.
My "Aha" this week comes from the realization that the Internet has a profound effect on politics in America, coupled with the fact that Campaign Finance will be very different in 2012. In January of this year, the Supreme Court blocked the ban on spending limits for Corporations who want to contribute to political campaigns. What does this mean? Basically, since (USUALLY, not ALWAYS) corporations are generally supporters of Republicans, the Republicans can expect a gigantic influx of advertising (sponsored by Big Oil, US car companies, insurance companies, etc) in 2012. These advertisements will be all over the media--the TV, the web, streaming services, billboards--you name it. Perhaps it will have to be the Democrats who, just four years after making waves online, will have to adapt to the financial behemoth of the Republican 2012 campaign.
As an afterthought, though, I will say this: If the media pundits are correct, and 2012 really is an Obama vs. Palin situation, God help us if America has already forgotten what happened from 2000-2008.
Family Guy
Aha
I feel like I need to spend a little time each day just searching and trying out new technologies, just to stay up to speed with what is going on. The only reason I have a Twitter account is because I had to have one for a class, although now I have one for the 4-H program I work with. I spend time at work on social media sites because I am updating them for work. I have individuals who have held out on getting a Facebook account or a Twitter account but sign up in order to stay up to date with what is going on in an organization in which they are involved.
Who knows what the next technology will be. A cellphone is now something we expect everyone to have. We also expect it to send and receive text messages, as the bare minimum. The idea of what else it can do today will pale in comparison to what it will be able to do this time next year. Who could have imagined a car-phone would come so far and so fast.
My only fear is what might happen if one day all technology seized to work (for one reason or another.) Would we be able to survive? Would I be able to survive? I hope the answer is yes, but I am sure there will be a lot of panic first.
The Impact of Technology on Youth Voting
Most of my friends have a Facebook account and a few even have Twitter. While we keep up to date with each other via texts and IM, Facebook tends to be the key to knowing what is going on in our world. If someone has free time or is looking for something to do, they post it on Facebook. They might send a text, but with the new smartphones, Facebook is still their best option. More people can be reached.
It is this idea which politicians are starting to base their campaigns. The recent election found iPhone users able to download election applications to keep them up to date on the latest results for the areas in which they are most interested in. They could also download an app to find out where they need to vote (and I am sure they probably have an app to give them directions to the location too.)
While the youth still don't get out in record numbers to vote (and statistically have never seen numbers compared to their older counterparts) politicians are starting to find ways in which to engage them in government. With issues in the economy, the youth are feeling the repercussions of some of the latest legislation. Health care, bail outs, taxes, and unemployment are all issues which directly effect our young adults. We need to keep engaging them through their choice of media, not ours. As everyone reminds us, the youth are the leaders of tomorrow. If we don't stay in touch with what they are doing and the latest technology in which they are using, they will soon leave us behind.
Sunday, November 21, 2010
There's an App for that, too???
Seriously.
She whipped out her fancy iPhone (Am I jealous? Maybe, but that's beside the point.) and showed me the app she uses to track everything. The app calculated nutrient deficiencies, provided average calorie counts, followed work out routines, suggested weight increases for strength training... I think it even scolded you if you made a poor choice at a restaurant. OK, maybe not that last one, but honestly... Do we really need all those features?
I told my colleague that I lost my weight and improved the healthiness in my life by just making sure I didn't eat things that I knew were clearly bad for me and by exercising a few times per week. Does it need to be any more complicated?
Check out the data on people using health related websites/apps. I was shocked it was even this high.
http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2010/Mobile-Health-2010.aspx
Gender Differences in Cellphone Use
Sociologist Shelia Cotten, Ph.D. conduct the study. "It has a lot to do with gender socialization," says Cotten. "Boys are often taught to explore and be more creative with technology and not to be afraid to take things apart. So it leads to more advanced cell phone uses among boys. Boys tend to see and use the cell phone as a gadget."
Aha
http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-a-cell-phone-app.htm
There isn't a clear cut definition, it all depends on who you are talking to. Since I picked this report to do a survey on, I needed to know what it was asking so I could answer questions from my applicants. Most of them were not sure themselves what an app was and whether they had it on their phone. If they did have it on their phone it was because the phone came with the app. I have discovered that apps can be addictive, like finding the next cool thing or the best way to entertain your friends. The best apps tend to be ones that are free (because who wants to spend money.) Some people will spend money on apps, but it tends to be as a result of a true need and not just a whim.
Even car makers are getting into the business of apps. OnStar and General Motors will be offering an app in 2011.
As technology grows our cellphone is no longer utilized mostly for making phone calls but as a hand-held computer, ask students at Harvard.
Gina's Aha
Cloud Computing
Security is my biggest concern with the switch to cloud computing by companies. I use Quickbooks online for my businesses which means that all of my financial information, payroll and tax information is all online. If something were to go wrong with Quickbooks site or that information was accessed by someone else it could be a major problem. For now, I'm relying on these major companies to keep the right security measures in place.
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Sunday, November 14, 2010
What "THEY" Know About You...
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703999304575399041849931612.html
"Privacy?"
My "Aha" this week comes from the fact that absolutely nothing I do online is as simple as it looks. Yahoo personalizes the ads based on my email content and my website visits. Google collects information from my 20+ searches per day. Who knows what sticky fingers the government has in our web activities. My school district records everything website I visit, and technically, if something appeared suspect, they have the right to subpoena my passwords to any websites I access (including online banking sites, personal email, and those pesky credit card statements--which could reveal a lot about my personal spending habits). And yet, I still play on Amazon during my plan period (if I'm caught up on all my work, obviously), search for fun deals online after school, and read restaurant/travel reviews when my kids are testing.
Big Brother is watching. We've been warned.
Aha
The idea that this could have been a covert affair through text and e-mail messages is one that can be frightening. Especially with girls who tend to be sneakier about how they pick on someone and more vicious about what they say.
I just hope if I encounter bullying in relationship to the youth I work with that I will be able to recognize it as bullying and have the tools available to help the youth out before it escalates.
Cyber-Bullying
PBS has developed some very useful websites, for both the education of youth who are using technology and can be the bully or the one being bullied.
http://pbskids.org/webonauts/ -fun game teaching youth about technology etiquette and usage. "An internet academy."
http://pbskids.org/itsmylife/ - interactive website with helpful answers to questions many youth have about their life. Games like Beat the Bully where youth can learn about bullying and be the crusader for good.
http://www.pbs.org/parents/ - A great site for parents with resources on questions from child development to cyber-bullying
While parents can not follow behind their children every minute of the day, they can take steps to help ensure their children are safe mentally, physically, and emotionally. There are plenty of resources available for parents and even some fun interactive one for youth, we just need to take the time to find them. Education is something which should never end, so showing our youth we care by educating ourselves on cyber-bulling and the current technologies being utilized while participating in these activities are important steps we can take.
Gina's Aha
I think kids appreciate boundaries. I know my 19 year old daughter did when she was a teenager. Even when she was annoyed with me she always respected my boundaries. She has even said that she appreciated me saying no because she didn't really want to go and it made it easier for her to say her mom wouldn't let her rather than she didn't want to. I treated her teenage years more as a partnership and it worked great. I sure hope it works that well two more times but I might be pushing my luck.
Schools Warned: Better Battle Bullying
I looked at several videos regarding bullying in general and found the statistics on this one pretty amazing. One said that 50% of kids said they had bullied someone else. I'm trying to figure out what has caused this massive increase in bullying behavior. The internet is certainly a culprit for bullying behavior but the internet is not responsible for the behavior inside the school and the lack of values and respect that these kids seem to have. I think the biggest cause for bullying behavior is a lack of respect for self and others. I don't understand what is causing this. I have two retail stores and employ mainly college-age students as retail clerks. The way they behave is entirely different from the same age group ten years ago. Ten years ago there was a general respect for authority and the job. Today, they have a "what can you do for me?" attitude. It's like I should feel lucky as their employer to have them.
My son has a classmate that has been a problem every since we've known him. At the age of four we were at a birthday party and I had to go get his mother to get him because he was holding a girl down yelling "bitch, bitch, bitch" while he was pointing his finger at her. His mother didn't speak to me for weeks and never did acknowledge that is what he was saying even though there were fifteen adults standing around. This same kid, now almost five years later, was sent to the principals office last week for cussing and causing problems on the playground. My reaction to bullying is to get the school systems to do more and be more proactive but in a situation like this boy, it is very much a parenting issue. His parents are bullies. They are competitive, selfish and will walk over anyone to get something their way. How does the education system teach this kid any different? It's a very sad situation. We request every year not to be in his class and the school respects that but I wish something else could be done.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
The Bubble Dome
This week, I watched Zuckerman (Yes, I know; ANOTHER post about Zuckerman!?) on his TED video, and I couldn't help but be reminded of the Pine View Bubble Dome when he spoke about xenophiles. Is America xenophobic? Is that why our news/media is so focused on US-based national stories rather than globally-based international ones? Does this further explain our fears about immigration? Our adversity to foreign films? Our reluctance to experience ethnic foods? Our lack of acceptance for non-conforming religions?
Perhaps we ought to remember where our country came from. America is a melting pot of races, religions, cultures, and traditions from all over the world. That is what makes us so great, right? Are we afraid that exposing ourselves to global influence might change that? Does that even make sense?
My "Aha" this week, thanks to Zuckerman, comes from the realization that we are living in our own US Bubble Dome. (To a certain degree, we even live in our own Kansas City Bubble Dome. Just look at this Breaking News top stories from one of our local news station's website: http://www.kmbc.com/news/25665092/detail.html) International news is incredibly important, yet it rarely sees the front page of the newspaper in any city in America. And try to see what's happening in other countries during the 6:00 news...yeah, right. Heck, even CNN--perhaps the most globally-conscientious news network--dedicated less than 3 minutes out of the 60 minutes of news I watched today to what was happening in other countries. That's nuts. We really are living in a bubble dome.
Xenophile
xeno·phil
i·a (-f
l
-
) n.
A person attracted to that which is foreign, especially to foreign peoples, manners, or cultures.
We have the world at our finger tips, yet most of the news we view is local or at most national. There are wars and tragedies occurring all over the globe which can and probably will have an impact on our lives in some way, yet we don't hear about them or seem to care to hear about them.
Here is a talk by Ethan Zuckerman, "a senior researcher at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University. His research focuses on the distribution of attention in mainstream and new media, the use of technology for international development, and the use of new media technologies by activists. He and his team recently launched Media Cloud, an open-source platform for studying online media that enables quantitative analysis of media attention." (http://www.ted.com/speakers/ethan_zuckerman.html)
Ethan Zuckerman: Listening to global voices | Video on TED.com
How much do you engage in educating yourself on what is going on outside of your own world? Try to find out something new about a different part of the world every day or once a week. Reach out to another flock and expand your flock of knowledge.
Aha
I also came to the realization that I was in the minority voice in my group. Most though blogs were useless and trivial, having no real meaning. I know most of the blogs I have run across are one person talking about their family or their hobby so do not interest the masses. To me it seems like a tool to use to help my family to keep in touch with me since I live in a different state and have siblings deployed in Iraq. They can spend time catching up on a blog or posting on themselves, especially my brother who has two young sons. Like Mena stated, it is a record. We take lots of pictures due to the ability of digital technology but most of the pictures are never seen once they are taken. Some find their way to social media sites like Facebook, but most are not printed any more, so can be lost.
Blogging may not be for everyone, but I can see how it could be useful for some. Much like YouTube, but you have more time to think and aren't judged by how you talk or look, just by what you write. Similar concept, just a different venue.
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Weekly aha - Gina Nellis
The main point I took from this week is from the video by Alexis Ohanian. He said the internet provides "a level playing field" and I totally agree with that. It allows a small company being run out of someone's house to compete with a large organization. It no longer matters whether you have a beautiful building or a good customer lobby because the majority of your customers may not ever see it!
TED
http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/rives_controls_the_internet.html
After this, I did a little more research on the website itself. TED was originally created as a conference to bring together ideas relating to technology, entertainment and design. It has evolved to much more. The website describes one of the conferences. I normally would not provide a quote this lengthy but it is beautifully written and makes me think of all of the things "that shouldn't work" but that do.
The website states "over four days, 50 speakers each take an 18-minute slot, and there are many shorter presentations, including music, performance and comedy. There are no breakout groups. Everyone shares the same experience. It shouldn't work, but it does. It works because all of knowledge is connected. Every so often it makes sense to emerge from the trenches we dig for a living, and ascend to a 30,000-foot view, where we see, to our astonishment, an intricately interconnected whole" (http://www.ted.com/).
The website also has a tab that has the questions whether it is "elitist" which I found intriguing. Why would a company website have that? What I found is that a person has to apply to attend the conference and once accepted the fee to attend is in excess of $5200. The audience in these talks we are seeing are all the top performers in their fields. I guess we should consider ourselves lucky that they are humble enough to post their videos online for the general public to view.
It really is a fascinating website if you are interested in short speeches that share very good information. I love learning about different topics especially relating to human or organizational behavior so I think this is a great resource.
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
You've got to be F-ing Kidding Me
Are we really this short-sighted in America? How is it possible that, just 2 years after electing Barack Obama by what in political terms is practically considered a landslide, we are handing the House back to the same crazy people who dug us such a deep hole that we're still trying to dig ourselves out?
You've got to be F-ing kidding me.
The GDP is finally growing, we've passed a barely eeked-out healthcare bill (that is not even as progressive as what Jimmy Carter proposed in 1977), and it looks like we might finally get out of the middle-east (effectively, anyway, since for some reason we still occupy Germany--didn't that end over 65 years ago?), but rather than rewarding the people who are moving our country forward, we are giving the keys back to the idiots who only know how to drive in reverse--in a military-issue gas-guzzling Hummer, wielding machine guns and throwing gigantic bags of cash, but only to the people who are already wealthy enough that they don't give a flying crap.
I love this country, but I cannot believe there are so many uneducated people who live in it. Is it because the lower and middle class people truly believe in the American dream--that they will one day become independently wealthy millionaires living in mansions more spacious than the White House itself? Why on Earth else would "normal" people be convinced that the Bush-era tax cuts would be beneficial to them? Or are they really just that concerned that all the CEOs and fat cats might have to sell their second private jets or perhaps pay 39% of their income rather than 36%?
Un-freakin'-believable. Two steps forward in 2008, and 40-some giant leaps backward in 2010.
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Digital Culture
Turn on one of these computers and navigate to the world wide web in order to answer all your questions. Well maybe not all of your questions, but you might find some answers. The problem is, just because you find an answer it doesn't mean that the answer is correct or the one in which you were searching for. Go to Wikipedia and many of your questions might be answered by a collective (much like the Borg.) Can't find the answer here? Start a new page and those who are ideally waiting will step in to help find the answer. The idea that there are more people proofing the sight to ensure accuracy than those who are posting to the site is amazing.
Week 3 Aha - Gina Nellis
In addition, I learned that I'm a person that uses social networking for information. I don't really communicate alot but I like to have the information. Facebook allows me to see what is going on in my circle of the world without communicating with anyone. I'm very much an introvert and I find this fascinating. I feel more connected to people and feel like I have a better social network now than I did ten years ago. I guess I am now questioning whether that virtual social network is real or partly fictional. The only information shared on Facebook is the part of a person's life they want you to see. For example, my personal page has information about my kids and their activities and our family activities but I never talk about work or school. The fact that I'm burned out and want to change my career or that I am in school with plans to do that has never been put on Facebook. It's something I keep private other than with a few close friends that I hang out with. If I'm doing that, and everyone else is doing that, then do we really "know" anyone in a virtual setting or do we only know how they choose to be perceived?
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Aha
What it does is take you to a random blog. Click it again, another blog. It doesn't filter through whether it is a private or public blog. If you get a private blog, just click it again.
Need an idea on what to put on a blog, click the tab. Want to know what else is on blogs, click the tab.
It is like rolling the dice or throwing a dart at a map to see where your next trip is going to be. You never know where you are going to go. With hundreds of blogs out there, the odds are you won't see the same one twice. I am not sure how many blogs are on Blogger, but I don't think I will be able to see them all, even with the help of a tab. If I am ever board and have nothing better to do and am curious, I just come to Blogger and click "Next Blog."
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Weekly Aha - Gina Nellis
As far as what I learned this week, the blog world and the Facebook world is so fascinating to me. There are so many blogs out there about every subject possible. My daughter has one that she updates regularly about college life. It is pretty interesting to read for me as her mother but I'm not sure why anyone that didn't know her would be interested. It does seem more like an online journal as someone else mentioned. Facebook is somewhat similar in the amount of information people share. Some Facebook users do not realize how damaging the posts or pictures on their page could be to their reputation. I search Facebook for a name before I hire any applicant. I had one girl that I interviewed and liked in the interview but her Facebook page was awful. Her language on her personal postings and all of her pictures of drinking and partying made me select someone else. I don't understand why anyone would have their site open so everyone can see.
I saw the movie "Social Network" this week. It really was a very good movie and I highly recommend it for anyone that didn't see it. I don't know the real story behind the creation of Facebook so I can't say whether the information was accurate or not but the storyline and acting was awesome. Zuckerberg's character was absolutely fabulous. His rapid speech and random thoughts showed just how much of a genius he was. The most interesting part of the movie for me was the relationship part and how Facebook has changed that. The fact that a relationship is not formal until you have changed your Facebook status or being able to check out someone's Facebook page before dating them. There is so much you can find out about someone if you can see their Facebook page. It really has opened up your life for all to see and if you don't protect who your "friends" are or protect the information you are putting on there then you would never have any idea who is looking. I'm curious to see what this will do to our social environment twenty years from now.
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Who Really Cares?
Blogs seem a lot like glorified journals to me. I don't especially care what most average people have to say about Obamacare or their favorite place for a Brazilian bikini wax. I thought these were the things we used to journal about--privately! Since when do we want other people reading our journals? Those are called memoirs, and no one actually writes their own, anyway, so the point is moot.
However, my "AHA!" this week comes from reading the blogs that actually teach us something. No, I don't mean the blogs that pretend to teach us something (http://cubachi.com/2010/08/26/bristol-palin-to-be-on-dancing-with-the-stars-let-her-have-fun/), but the ones that actually help us save money (http://moneysavingmom.com/) or make home repairs (http://diy-home-repair.com/) or travel efficiently (http://wdwfanboys.com/index.php) or cheat death (http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/13891). Those are the blogs worth reading. And if you take notice, they are also the ones with lots of ads. Because people click on ads when they read the blogs. And that generates revenue. And smart people like revenue.
So, what am I saying? Only smart people should blog? Well, perhaps, in a way. If you have something to share with the world that is going to MEAN SOMETHING to other people, then by all means, blog away. If not, then please, keep your journal at home. I don't really care about your shimmery lipstick that goes perfectly with your Prada bag that you bought on sale at Macy's with your new boyfriend and his lactose-intolerant daughter (a child from his first marriage he neglected to tell you about until now, three months into your relationship--queue drama!). So, thank you for sharing, but really, no thanks.
Friday, October 22, 2010
Social Media and Education
Thursday, October 21, 2010
I also have a sister who works for a technology company, so she was exposed to social networks through her job. She is only two years younger, but it seems almost like ten years. She is always on her Blackberry. I try to have a conversation with her when I am visiting her and I get displaced by a text message, right in the middle of my conversation. She couldn't wait a couple of minutes to see what it says or to respond.
I know many other relatives, aunts especially, who are on Facebook who keep in touch or updated on what is going on in my life or my siblings through Facebook. They have told me numerous times that they may not post a lot but they really enjoy reading what we are doing and how our lives are going. Since we live in different states, we don't see each other very often, so they have actually become more in touch with what is going on in my life than before.
The biggest difference in how people use Facebook is some go to the site to fill time. They play games, look at pictures, check in on friends, or search for others out there. Other individuals just check in once in a great while because someone sent them a message or they need to get a hold of someone and it can be a place to start. The biggest issue many have with Facebook is the security risk. Others are oblivious or in denial about the risk. It will be interesting to see where social media will take us in the next few months, years, and beyond.
Social Network
And it was.
Jesse Eisenberg (actor in such acclaimed films as Zombieland and Adventureland) plays a picture-perfect representation of the socially-challenged @$$hole, Mark Zuckerberg, the genius/thief who wrote the code for Facebook. Oddly, the protagonist's relationship with Justin Timberlake's character, the other young genius who invented Napster (remember that awesome P2P program?), is as strange in the movie as it is in print. I was waiting for the movie to morph into Brokeback Mountain, and then the cops busted into the room and arrested Timberlake for illegal drugs. Sort of like real life? I digress.
Anyway, The Social Network really is worth watching. The actors are good, the story is entertaining (even if it is admittedly Hollywoodized), and the content is more user-friendly than the website on which the movie is centered. Check out the movie trailer below!
Halloween -Aha
Give me a topic and I can do the research for you and tell you all the intimate details. Take the upcoming holiday season, I have been doing some research to help educate the youth I work with and also to help make some of our Halloween decorations authentic.
Halloween is my husband and my favorite holiday. We put up decorations with flashing lights, moving parts, and scary noises. I am an individual who like to know the "why" behind everything. So have learned more about why Halloween has come to be.
What we now call Halloween was a Celtic holiday called samhain.
Many of the customs of the Druids were adapted and celebrated during this time. They believed the souls of those just departed would wander the earth on this night, so many would put candles in their windows.
With the rise of the Catholic church, Pope Gregory II moved the holiday "All Hallows Eve" to coincide with samhain, in order to incorporate an already established holiday into a christian holiday. He hoped overtime the Celtic holiday would be forgotten and the christian holiday revered.
Overtime other rituals and customs were added into the mix, until we come to find what we now have Halloween. I don't think it the change of date for All Hallows Eve had the effect that Gregory had hoped for though.
Want to know more history: http://www.history.com/topics/halloween