Sunday, September 13, 2009

Social Media at Your Fingertips


I”ll be the first to admit that I am still learning the ins and outs of computer technology. I have a MySpace and a Facebook site. I have never tweeted on Twitter, but I’m sure that’s bound to happen at some point. When I need a laugh, I know I can instantly log on to YouTube and watch an old Seinfeld episode, without having to wait until later that night to catch a rerun on cable. For the past few years, I’ve been reading the news headlines online and throwing a hard-copy of the newspaper in a collective stack in a basket on my floor. I get to them eventually because no matter how modern our society is becoming, there’s nothing like the smell of ink and newsprint as you sit in your most comfortable chair, absorbing words.

The articles I have read the past few days on Web 2.0 were foreign to me. I actually had to read them twice. Once I got the terminology down, I thought I had a pretty good grasp as to what I was absorbing. Hopefully.

So here’s my take on Web 2.0 and how it effects us personally as well as a society:

1.) Blog your little heart out. Have a crazy neighbor like so many of us do? Share it in your blog, sit back and watch how many other users will comment on how they also share your pain. You may even get tips on how to handle them! Hosting a dinner party for the first time and freaking out about it? Vent on your blog, and watch how fast the hostess-with-the-mostess eases your tension. Chances are she’ll give you a great recipe. My point is, Web 2.0 applications make it possible for us to read one another’s blogs and let us reach out to people from all over for tips on surviving dinner parties.

2.) Information sensation! How many times a day do we use Google? Exactly. This application and all of its branches allow us to search for anything our hearts desire. It highly maximizes the content search aspect of Web 2.0 and makes everything very accessible to users. Just Google it!

3.) Collaboration and Convergence in the media. Backpack Journalists are on the rise and newspapers are cutting costs and employees. Society is participating in news and information more than ever because of Web 2.0 applications. Feedback on articles on newpaper sites are generating a voice and sometimes full out debates. Journalism and the way we get information is changing. Although there’s a debate as to whether we’re all Journalists now, one thing is for sure: Web 2.0 is having a major impact on the media industry.

4.) Isolation. This is the one aspect of Web 2.0 applications and computer technology in general that frightens me the most. There are many people out there who do nothing but sit on their computers night and day and do whatever it is they do. I’m not referring to those who make a living working with computers. It’s the constant need to be connected that sets these people apart from the real world. Social interaction and the skill set you learn just by having a face-to face conversation could be in danger due to internet addiction. While it’s important to embrace change and how far we’ve come to utilize the latest computer technology, it’s also imperative that we instill real-world, social interaction among the younger generations of users.

Overall, Web 2.0 has generated an entirely new approach to social media, using applications such as MySpace, Facebook and Google. Information is more accessible and social networking is rapidly expanding. These applications, as well as the change in societal communication has forced the media to take on new platforms to keep their heads above water. We’re living in a time where we and our communities can greatly benefit from the instant gratification of getting the information we want within seconds. However, we can’t allow ourselves to become zombies and become numb to the very real world that’s around us.

2 comments:

  1. I really enjoyed reading your blog on Web 2.0 and how it has impacted on society. I identified best with your take on converging media and backpack journalism; as I am also a journalism major, it is a little daunting to believe the amount of work that I may be subjected to in a field which is so competitive.
    I also struggled with the terminology, particularly in the Web 2.0 and hypertext reading. I found a great article, What is Web 2.0, which may repeat Van Wamalen and De Kool, but also has a few mind maps, tables and diagrams which compare and contrast Web 1.0 and 2.0. Have a peek at it; this article simplifies everything, making these terms and concepts a little more comprehensive. Hopefully my link works!

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  2. I enjoyed your blog on web 2.0. It pointed out a lot of the aspects of the program that I and probably everyone out there uses daily without even realizing! I agree with the first commenter that the Web 2.0 lingo was a little difficult to grasp, but I think your blog did a great job breaking down the entire concept I'm including link about web 2.0 that hopefully we haven't covered yet in class: Tim O'Reilly: What is Web 2.0

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