While waiting for a compile, I just sent the following message to a friend -- using ICQ, the "neat new toy" of 5 or 6 years ago:
This livejournal thing I mentioned a couple weeks back turns out to be kind of nifty. (Nifty in the "community" sense, not really the "geek toys" sense. Though it's got a little of that, too.) I've found over the years that there are some usenet groups that I was really only reading for the writings of a few interesting people; the model here is that people write about whatever they like and you find the ones you're interested in following. (And you can jump-start the process by inspecting the sets of people your friends find interesting. So when Ralph pointed me at this the first thing I did was browse all of *his* friends.)
Something like this was probably the subject of somebody's sociology thesis or the like; I wonder what the conclusions were. :-)
This livejournal thing I mentioned a couple weeks back turns out to be kind of nifty. (Nifty in the "community" sense, not really the "geek toys" sense. Though it's got a little of that, too.) I've found over the years that there are some usenet groups that I was really only reading for the writings of a few interesting people; the model here is that people write about whatever they like and you find the ones you're interested in following. (And you can jump-start the process by inspecting the sets of people your friends find interesting. So when Ralph pointed me at this the first thing I did was browse all of *his* friends.)
Something like this was probably the subject of somebody's sociology thesis or the like; I wonder what the conclusions were. :-)
Re: trees, questions, and relationships
Date: 2001-10-17 08:35 am (UTC)exposure to more acquaintances most definitely harms the ability to form close relationships.. one has a finite amount of time, and regular interaction with a larger number of people takes up more of that time, than regular interaction with a smaller body of people..
I suppose it depends on the style of interaction. I have groups of friends who I tend to spend time with as a group -- so whether the Sunday-night dinner group has 6 people or 8 doesn't really affect how much time I spend with each of them. If I was spending time with each of those people singly, it *would* matter. The net makes it easy to share thoughts with groups of people, so except in matters such as these individual responses, the size of the group doesn't significantly affect the amount of time you spend participating.
Or maybe I'm just predisposed toward this sort of thing because I'm a competent writer and a lousy conversationalist. :-)