Sunday, July 17, 2011

Text me. *wink face*

This world has become virtually virtual (weird.). Everything from our driving directions to dinner plans is on our smart-phones. 


Ever lose/forget your phone somewhere? You realize it's missing when you show up at your local bar with your friends and all of a sudden "WHOOPS! I FORGOT TO CHECK IN!" You reach into your pocket so you can power up Foursquare and your greeted by your wallet... no.... keys.... no......... crumpled dollar bill.....NO.....okay now your freaking out!!!! 


In those 3 seconds you were kickin' it old school. Like remember day planners? Or when you had to memorize your friend's house telephone number? Or when you couldn't reach your friend on that house phone, so you'd simply try again later?  Now we shoot to Facebook, Social Media, and (creepily enough) Foursquare to see where everyone is out at all hours of the day. We cannot become disconnected. It's not a bad thing, I guess. But simplicity is swimming away from us.

***



Dating has also become a past time (no, not E-Harmony folks). What happened to the simplicity of answering an un-screened telephone call, texting when you want to (not when your friends say it's appropriate) or restraining yourself from stalking the person on Facebook before accepting a dinner invitation?



In an article, "Mobile phones in romantic relationships and the dialectic of autonomy versus connection" (Duran, R.L., Kelly, L. & Rotaru, T., 2011) they discuss assumptive rules about mobile phone usage in intimate relationships. I have had so many friends receive a text from a significant other, but refuse to text back right away in the worry that they appear "too eager", "creepy", "too excited". Some of the surveyed questions included things like:


  • "We expect each other to respond to a text or a voicemail message within the hour"
  • "After a certain time of night it's not okay to call or text each other"
  • "We are expected to call or text message each other when we change locations"
These questions seem a little outrageous. But the first questions mentioned above is what drove me to conduct this survey again for my Communication Research Methods class at the College of Charleston . "Within the hour..." I have a few friends who get nervous when it's 5 minutes after the original sent message.







I was out the other evening with close friend when a boy of her interest called her on her smartphone. Instead of picking up the call, she switched the ringer off. I questioned her action and she said "Oh I'll just text him later." 


In the study mentioned above that partners receive over 6 messages a day from their significant other, while less than 2.5 phone calls. Instead of having a conversation with one another we are relying on plastic and emoticons to conceal messages.

I'm hypothesizing that there is a correlation between modern communication skills in intimate relationships and the success of those relationships.  Are we more comfortable sending CMC (Computer Mediated Communication) messages to our intimate partners?


Stay tuned .... I hope to figure it out!






Thursday, April 21, 2011

About the Blogger

Lucy is a communications and theater student at the College of Charleston in South Carolina. The demand for social media in the corporate world inspired Lucy to begin this blog as a compilation of her research and academic career. It's a reflection of thoughts and insight on technology, with a little theatrical flair thrown in. 

Lucy recently finished her internship at Step Ahead Inc. in Charleston, SC. She hopes to graduate in May of 2012 with a BA in Corporate Communication and a minor in performance Theater.


Tuesday, April 5, 2011

“Please turn off all cell phones and electronic devices.” Yeah right!

The College of Charleston’s Department of Communication hosted an advisory council forum on Thursday, March 31st. The esteemed panelists: Steve Cody, Managing partner and Co-Founder of Peppercom; Jeannie Bunton, Vice-President of External Relations for the International Center for Research on Women and Keith Lindenburg director of National Public Relations for Deloitte, presented useful information on social media for students and businesses alike.

 
As a communication major at CofC, I enthusiastically attended the event. Before the forum however, Jonathan Rivers, one of my classmates in my Communication and Technology class (#comm360 on Twitter) decided it would be appropriate to create a hashtag, forming a live tweet-up. #CommForum was born (what’s the APA rule for beginning a sentence with a hashtag?)! We promoted the tag throughout businesses in the Charleston and the CofC campus. Even our professor and mediator of the event, Dr. Micheal Reardon (@mreardon428) was tweeting and re-tweeting back to his tech-savvy students while sitting on stage.
                                        
 “Please turn off your cell phones,” seems to be a retired phrase in the professional world. Dr. Reardon promoted @jonathanriver’s creative hashtag during the introduction of panelists and encouraged smartphone use. Clearly, the etiquette is changing in the business world. However, managing your social media accounts while trying to stay engaged in a discussion, presents a challenge. As a student accustomed to technology, I’ve mastered the “texting-under-the-desk-so-I-don’t-get-caught” tactic. That mastery has become worthless with the growing importance of Twitter, Foursquare and Facebook in the corporate, social and academic environment.

Steve Cody’s presentation on the advent of mommy bloggers captivated the attending students and Jeannie Bunton’s inspirational quotes made retweet history for #commforum. Keith Lindenberg commented on the importance of self-promotion through social media and how venues like LinkedIn.com are becoming just as (or more) essential as the white paper resume we know and love.

Although unemployment is high, social media venues have sure made it easy to connect with companies across the world. Just after the forum, students were being @mentioned across the campus by the represented companies on Thursday. My twitter following increased and my blog saw more traffic than ever, all because of a simple hashtag. Thank you #commforum!

Follow these social media hounds on Twitter!
International Center for Research on Women: @icrw
Steve Cody - Peppercom: @RepManCody
Brian McGee, Dept. of Communication, CofC: @BrianMcGeeCofC
Dr. Micheal Reardon:@mreardon428
Jonathan Rivers, CofC Student:@jonathanrivers

or search #comm360, #CommForum



Sunday, February 20, 2011

Something bigger than the internet? Pssshhhhh nah!

The New Yorker, February 13, 2011
An article with the subtitle “How the Internet gets inside us” by Adam Gopnik might seem a bit radical and borderline creepy for hesitant readers of The New Yorker magazine. This notable periodical publishes all kinds of independent stories, academic articles and news pieces with a similar bite. But this piece particularly stands out to a generation which Marshall McLuhan might categorize as a “global village” (Reardon, 2011). Gopnik says optimists in this generation are “proclaiming the coming of the digital millennium.” (Gopnik, 2011). We are a society of constant awareness and technological innovation that never take a break from live streaming news, gossip, whatever you call it. Gopnik provokes concepts of technological determinism and aspects of social penetration theory through his an interesting analysis of internet users on the cusp of a proclaimed “digital millennium”.


Technological determinism is a concept coined by Marshal McLuhan stating that “inventions in technology invariably cause cultural change” (Reardon Lecture 2011). With regards to Adam Gopnik’s perspective, this invention would be classified as the internet. It might be considered a stretch to claim that the World Wide Web is a recent invention when it’s been conducting traffic since 1996, even earlier in smaller concentrations (Wood & Smith, 2005). However, the cultural change is a growing phenomenon, and according to Gopnik it’s growing inside of us.


Ann Blair of Harvard makes a comment within The New Yorker piece saying that “what we’re going through is like what others went through a very long while ago.” (Gopnik, 2011). Blair would therefore agree with McLuhan’s idea that the 2011 generation is a replication of an era he coined as the “tribal era” in which people understood one another aurally and orally (Reardon, 2011). McLuhan makes the argument that this feature was replicated with inventions like the telephone. We transitioned, however, into an entirely new era with the invention of quick, efficient and accessible internet, where time and space have completely disintegrated creating a global uniformity within cyberspace. Ann Blair comments that an “information overload” is occurring (Gopnik, 2011). Constant innovations create new ideas at a quicker rate than we are able track. So what do we do? Invent something to keep up!  Up-to-date news feeds, tweets and research keep an internet user constantly on their toes searching for more. How far does a user delve into current information before jumping to the next new tab?
            
Irwin Altman and Dalmas Taylor developed the Social Penetration Theory which conceptualizes the idea that a gradual relationship develops through each person’s willingness to share and receive information through a defined process (Reardon, Social Penetration Theory, 2010). This interpersonal communication perspective heavily draws from face-to-face relationships. Although a communication student could also apply this theory to internet information transferring. Adam Gopnik boldly states in his piece that “…it’s hard not to conclude that as we adapt to the intellectual environment of the Net our thinking becomes shallower.” (Gopnik, 2011). A significant piece to Altman and Taylor’s theory is that an individual often discloses more in the early stages of a relationship but only goes so deep with their disclosure; breadth vs. depth. So while Gopnik may have his opinion of our shallow thinking, one might argue that this lack of depth provides greater opportunity for various, differentiated knowledge.
           
Mr. Gopnik references two men by the name of Andy Clark and Robert K. Logan who argue the definition of our capacity for knowledge. They argue that “[knowledge] is a constant flow of information, memory, plans and physical movements in which as much thinking goes on out there as in here.”  (Gopnik, 2011) A reader might instantaneously conclude that the internet is all knowledgeable, which is most regards is true. But with the constant flow of information and the swiftness of our society, one could argue the impossibility of depth on a particular topic in an ever-changing environment.  We are accustomed to live-streaming content, and with new material constantly in the palm of our hands, our breadth, or expansion, of information is substantial. We know everything all the time. However, we might stay shallow in our willingness to dive into new information to gather all the details.  The USA Today is an example of our preference for breadth over depth. Headlines are in big and bold, stories are a few paragraphs and the pictures are quickly informative. As a typical consumer, that’s as far as the news goes for us. And as the newspaper adapts online, companies like USA Today, and even The New Yorker only provide portions of stories on homepages to entice readers but that’s often as far as we go.
           
Adam Gopnik is witty and revolutionary in his categorization of people; the Never-Betters, the Better-Nevers and the Ever-Wasers. The Never-Betters, one could argue, are firm believers in McLuhan’s technological determinism. Gopnik says they believe “we are on the brink of a new utopia, where information will be free and democratic…” (Gopnik, 2011). This generation is seeing prime examples of that with developments like LinkedIn and the trillions upon trillions of independent websites and blogs. Anyone can share information at any time. This information reaches us through different variables, the strongest one being breadth in which we know a lot of topics but can only go so deep in explaining them. This information sharing connects us to form a sense of a “global village” where we are all knowing all the time. But both of these ideas lead the Better-Nevers to believe that there is a problem with the capacity and availability of the internet. “…our children are having their brains altered by too much instant messaging and the like…” (Gopnik, 2011). Is it the Better-Never’s internet anxiety that controls their technological hesitancy? How much information is too much? Adam Gropnik airily defends both of the extremists sides of internet lovers and internet haters when he says “The trouble come when one side is right and other side is wrong and doesn’t know it.” (Gopnik, 2011) A spacey argument to question what is right?
            
A new thing comes along every day; ew social media, a trending tweet topic or advanced computer systems to simulate human life. We adapt, respond and move on. Technological determinism has been theoretically proved so far. It seems unfathomable to what degree we can advance in what we already know. The internet was a huge revelation of information processing and sharing. To think that there will be something more efficient is not far fetched. Gutenberg with the printing press; Graham Bell and the telephone; Gates to Microsoft and now Zuckerberg with Facebook; they’ve all thought of the next big thing. Adam Gopnik is wondering who’s next

Works Cited

Gopnik, A. (2011, February 13). The Information: How the Internet gets inside us. The New Yorker, p. 9.

Reardon, D. M. (2010). Social Penetration Theory. Lecture. Charleston, SC.

Reardon, D. M. (2011, February 7). Technological Determinism. Lecture. Charleston, SC.

Wood, A. F., & Smith, M. J. (2005). Online Communication: Linking Technology, Identity, and Culture. Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrensce Erlbaum Associates.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Homework assignment turned Blogpost! Thanks Reardon!


The onset of the digital newspaper was a looming reality. “The Daily” is a news application for the iPad developed by the News Corporation (Peters and Stelter 2011). Rupert Murdoch of the News Corporation stated in a recent article in the New York Times that “New times demand new journalism” These “new times” imply the concept of a digitalized society. In this type of digitalized environment humans are used to having information directed right to their fingertips. Smart phones, portable computers and the invention of social networks are enabling products like The Daily to be produced, and hopefully, be successful.

The concept of a digital-only newspaper is a clean example of computer mediated communication (CMC). The definition of CMC according to Wood and Smith is “the study of ways in which human behaviors are maintained and altered by exchange of information through machines.” (Wood and Smith 2005) The concept of this article clearly pertains to the change of behavior with the arrival of new technologies in our culture today. Rupert Murdoch of News Corporation points out the effects of CMC when he says this new product was targeted for iPad users who want “content tailored to their specific interests to be available anytime, anywhere.” In 2011, those specific interests are technologically centered. In a digitalized society we “share and store just about everything in a computer-readable format of 1’s and 0’s” (Reardon Lecture Notes). Note that “The Daily takes that same sensibility to the digital age by trying to enliven the printed word with photographs, video and interactive features that work seamlessly together.” (Peters and Stelter 2011). We are no longer satisfied with a printed piece of news. Even the television news channels are fading into static. Bloggers and social media users have become interactive in displaying news and we expect that same level of interactivity with our news sources. The Daily can accommodate those expectations.
In Wood and Smith’s Online Communication they identify the term mediated communication in which “communicators are separated by some type of technology.” They point out that this technology can be a piece of paper or a text message on a cell phone. (Wood and Smith 2005). This separation is becoming more apparent as we move further into an era of digitalization. But is this separation a good thing? We’ve become so accustomed to communicating through technology that face time is valued and sometimes even awkward. Mediated communication might be the only thing we know in a few years. Sure there will be physical interactions between communicators but the majority of business today is taking place online. We are growing more and more efficient with our technologies. iPad users can now generate live streaming news directly to their devices via the News Corporation. Smart phones have done this for a while, but the idea that a newspaper company has gone completely digital, is somewhat of a landmark.  Alan D. Mutter comments in The New York Times article that “There’s always the danger you’ll be too first,” (Peters and Stelter 2011). iPad users may or may not adopt this product right away. This idea of a digital-only newspaper might be “too new”. Sarah Rotman Epps says “Success will come in small numbers.” Adaptation to this digitalized, mediated communication, will take time. Maybe the News Corporation has taken the plunge into something our society needs to get used to.

Works Cited

February 2, 2011. “News Corporation Introduces ‘The Daily’, the Digital-Only Newspaper.” The New York Times, Business Day. Peters and Stelter. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/03/business/media/03daily.html?_r=1&smid=tw-nytimesbusiness

Online Communication: Linking Technology, Identity and Culture. Wood and Smith. 2005. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. 4-7

Thursday, February 3, 2011

"EVERYONE'S WATCHING TO SEE WHAT YOU WILL DO, EVERYONE'S LOOKIN' AT YOU!"

Todd Fast of Technorati.com was up in arms about his blog post being “watched”! Doesn’t he want viewers? This was a different type of page view.  He mentioned in a January 30th article that he was unable to revise his “explicit” document about Lady Gaga. From what I read, his article didn’t seem to be pushing limits that have already been tipped over. Fast noticed after positing that there had been a hold placed on his Wordpress blog page. The independent writer fought back in frustrations, saying “I thought this was America.” No Todd Fast, this is America in the digital age. We are used to not being censored, and heaven forbid we come across a trusted site that does censor its user content. I don’t have anything against Lady Gaga, etc. but I’m glad that there is still some sense of an editor in the crazy world of “write-what-you-will” social media. It keeps the world moving a bit slower in my book, which can be nice every once and a while.

www.gaganews.com

I don’t think it was fair of Wordpress to disengage Mr. Fast from his own writings, especially after saying “…Wordpress is limited only by your imagination” in its offered features. But I like the fact that companies such as Wordpress haven’t neglected surveillance. I think it’s still needed. It’s a bit daunting to think everyone is a news reporter now-a-days. We get up to the second tweets, live streaming web videos and grossly opinionated blogs on mundane topics (some of you might be thinking Like this one?); my suggestion? Take a break from 24/7 media and pick up a newspaper where an Editor still has a job. Kick it old school!

Monday, January 31, 2011

Rotherberg vs. Zuckerberg

I was sitting at the College of Charleston's Hungry Cougar having a delicious southern breakfast of grits and bacon, and I unfolded my hard-copy of the New York Times. 


Yeah...weird I know. Who reads the paper anymore? But with free delivery service to the campus residence halls, I couldn't pass it up....That's beside the point!


I'm a social media hound! I turned to the Business Day section and saw the infamous word "Facebook". My eyes were fixed! I whipped out my highlighter and began reading. 

The article by Verne G. Kopytoff attempts to destroy rumors about Flickr's dying trend as a photo-sharing website. But for me the article simply re-instated that Facebook will never be defeated.


"I'VE NEVER EVEN HEARD OF FLICKR" That's probably because you adopted Facebook First.

Flickr is a site owned and maintained by Yahoo! I remember being about grade-school age and using Yahoo! for everything, games, e-mail (or lack-there-of) and news updates when I got into high-school. But the arrival of MySpace and  Facebook, Yahoo! seemed to disintegrate into the world of social media. I know a few people that still use the venue for world updates and e-mails (which seems to also be a dying trend) but Yahoo's leading competitor is Google. I mean... c'mon folks.


According to The Times article "Yahoo's top executives have barely mentioned Flickr publicly for some time. Few top executives actually have a public Flickr account." The embarrassment of the deceased photo-sharing network seems to be a direct cause of Facebook's increasing popularity. The article points out that there are 123.9 million users who upload pictures to Facebook, while Flickr tops out a measly 21.3 million. (Those numbers seem huge to me, but who am I to say)


Flickr users are often times professional or showcase photographers. In this case Flickr is more of a professional venue to share photos. There are endless amounts of articles about pictures on Facebook being to risky, wild, inappropriate (the adjectives are copious). Facebook seems to be constant status updates through picture sharing medium while Flickr remains to be professionally sound. This is a benefit to some, but not for the mainstream, no-time-to-think social media users today.


I have a few photographer friends and every once and a while I get an e-mail link to see their photos. The quality is clearly better but there is really no easy way of scanning the photos. You have to have a log-in name (along with your Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Gmail accounts to remember) and our minds have been so programmed to venues like Facebook, I find it difficult to use. The format of social media sites is simple. Flickr is outdated in this aspect. 


One idea that caught my eye in this article was that Flickr and Yahoo were planning to grant more  viewership to trending current events through photos. I thought this was a genius idea and it's something that Facebook could definitely benefit from. With venues like twitpic some of these ideas are already in progress. Maybe Flickr could use it's reputable professionalism and instill some plans to encourage this. 


WHAT IT BOILS DOWN TO...


But the mainstream screams "FACEBOOK!" And we can't really shy away from that it all goes back to good ole' Communication Theory class and the SIDE Theory (social identification/de-individuation model). This communication model claims that we often set aside our own desires in order to become more socially acceptable in society [Postumes/Spears]. Not be extreme, but seriously "everyone is doing it" Facebook that is. 


No other comment in this article grabbed my social media psyche than "The internet is starting to rotate around the axis of Facebook..." I find this to be completely true as you'll find in all of my social media blog entries. Matthew Rosenberg (of Flickr) mentions in this article that he wants to bring back the simplicity of photo-sharing where it was "a rich storytelling experience" and not just something you breeze through on a day to day basis. But Mr. Zuckerberg has changed all that. I own one photo album. When my computer is near crashing, I tell the guy to save my music and my pictures. Everything is electronic and everything is public. 


I've made the debate several times that Facebook will become a monopoly. This article pillars my argument.




((Statistics and article from The New York Times. Monday, January 31, 2011. Business Day; B3 "At Flickr; Fending off Rumors and Facebook" by Verne G. Kopytoff.))