I was having a debate on an internal work forum. The woman in question had a view of social networking sites being egotistical and nerdy, and claimed that her 21 year old daughter and her friends and university had grown bored of the "novelty" factor and stopped using these sites.
Here's what happened:
I then hit back with this:
She has yet to respond.
Here's what happened:
Anti-Blog Woman said:Me said:"Using blogs as your main method of communication is the standard thing amongst my generation."
I would beg to differ. I have a 21 year old daughter - (I'm not that old myself, 40 in fact, and perfectly capable of using this type of technology so don't think that it is somehow the preserve of your generation) at university in Brighton. She and most of her mates all initially signed up for these things, used them for a while but then the novelty wore off and they got back to having an actual life instead of a virtual one. They're too busy to sit alone in front of computers blogging away. They've all got lectures, coursework, jobs, social lives and families taking up their time.
By the way, I knew what mark all my mates got in their degree because we discussed it in the pub while we were getting drunk to celebrate.
Sorry, but I think it's all just a little bit nerdy/egotistical![]()
I then hit back with this:
Me said:No need to get in a huff - I was in no way insinuating that you were somehow old and out of touch with technology. My sincerest apologies if that is how you interpreted what I said.
Firstly, I would argue that your daughter is the exception, not the rule. You also suggest that they saw it as something with a "novelty factor". Most people of this generation would actually view it as a part of life. You also mention having an "actual life instead of a virtual one". I'd like to be the first to inform you that the two are not mutually exclusive. Perhaps you were unaware of this, hence your outdated opinion of blogging as being something "nerdy".
Secondly, I suggest you take a look at your daughters' Facebook profile, assuming she has one. She may use it more than you think.
But, for arguments' sake, I'll take what you said in black and white. You claim that your daughter and her circle of friends quickly grew tired of having an online presence and now solely communicate via so-called "real-life" methods. I'll break this down:
A) Either by some magical coincedence, all of your daughters' high school friends ended up going to the same University,
or B) She is neglecting them in favor of her college friends.
Seeing as they are so busy with "lectures, coursework, jobs, social lives and families", this would warrant keeping up-to-date with these friends via the telephone medium, which is very ineffective at constant communcation in this day and age, not to mention time-consuming - time being something you suggest that they do not have a lot of. Perhaps you feel that friendships can not exist outside of a local radius.
You also make a mention of "sit[ting] alone in front of computers". This is where I beg to differ. The majority of us actually blog and update our status on social networks via our smartphones, whilst multitasking. For example, my band are headlining at Glastonbury next week. A lot of my friends can't be there, so I will be updating from the festival, taking pics with my camera phone and instantly uploading them to facebook, ie: "Here's a picture of my tent. It collapsed after I took this photo. Now I'm lying in the mud somewhere whilst two dreadlocked hippies are getting high and singing Bob Marley songs less than 5 metres away". Whilst we're on stage, our camera crew will be filming professionally shot footage for our next project, but also our fans lucky enough to attend will be filming us on their camera phones and uploading the footage instantly to YouTube, for the benefit of our worldwide fanbase, which is great for us in particular, since we have a much larger international fanbase than domestic one.
A lot more interesting to them as it's happening, rather than a hazy recap of a whole weekends events written 2 days later.
Finally, I'd like to make the point that I, and most people, have friends at various Universities, cities and countries. In the UK alone, at pretty much every corner of the country from Edinburgh to Exeter. Perhaps, in your mind, it would be less "nerdy/egostistical" for me to make a mission around the entire country, and maybe book a few flights to Los Angeles, Philadelphia and India to my friends at Universities there in order to have a congratulatory drink. (no need to catch up, we already update each other on interesting events via facebook on a daily basis). Sorry, but I'm too busy with my work etc, not to mention I don't have the time, or the money.
But perhaps you'd rather I ignore all those people since it's obviously not possible to have a tight-knit friendship with anyone that doesn't share your local pub.![]()
She has yet to respond.