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Tag Archives: social networking

10,000 Tweets.

Wow I actually sent 10,000 tweets! That is crazy as I slow down and think about it. I started twitter back on January 14th 2008,  (my twitter birthday) quite reluctantly. It was still quite new back then and I was weary of another “electronic leash” that I would feel attached to. Overall I would say it hasn’t become a leash and I see it as “value added” to my life. Throughout my day Twitter allows me to checkin on others lives and see what they are up to without disrupting them. Also it allows me to share my life with 308 followers (and others via the web) as I send out various daily tweets such as: witty quirks, occasional venting, who I’m with and sharing a quote or bible verse I found inspiring. It’s amazing how Twitter has grown so much and found many uses such as raising funds for disaster relief and organizing revolutions around the world.  Still for me Twitter remains a quick & easy way to share my life with others.

To my followers: Thanks for following me! To those not yet on Twitter: What are you waiting for? Join now!

To those who will never join: My tweets are public which means you can see them all HERE. (feel free to bookmark the page)

Here’s to 10,000 more!

 
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Posted by on June 1, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

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The Facebook Generation

Do you have a Facebook page? If you do you are like the estimated 410 million who do…especially more likely of those who read blogs like mine :) Recently I read the below article and thought they had some interesting thoughts about this emerging generation that has never known a world without Facebook.

Is Facebook creating a temptation generation?

Facebook is the digital marshmallow we can’t resist.


By Mel Layos
Back in the late 1960s, researcher Walter Mischel conducted an experiment that has come to be known as the “Marshmallow Test.”

This test consisted of giving marshmallows to 4-year-olds, with the promise of more marshmallows to come if they could delay eating the first for 15 minutes. Those who resisted the sugary treat were shown to do well later in life, while those who failed to resist were more likely to suffer from lower test scores, even issues of drug dependency.

More than 40 years later, Facebook has proved to be an even sweeter marshmallow to its millions of users than any puffed confection Mr. Mischel handed out.

While beginning to write this piece, I couldn’t resist the temptation to check my own Facebook profile.

Has anybody commented on my latest status update? Has Jenna from high school accepted my late-night friend request? I can just click right over and find out, but I know once I do I’ll end up spending the rest of the afternoon playing Scrabble and commenting on tagged photos.

I’m not alone with this struggle. Comb through any random Facebook page and you’ll find people around the world updating statuses from their offices, from classrooms, even from behind the wheel. The deferred rewards of keeping one’s job, learning arithmetic, or even staying alive are no match for the compound-worded monster.

The temptation to let others know how happy or sad we feel, and more important, the numerous supportive messages we’ll receive from our “friends,” is an exercise in deferred gratification that we all lose on a daily basis. And who’s to blame us? With its complicated algorithms and formulas, Facebook takes the legwork out of friendship. Do you know Bob? Why not send a friend request to his girlfriend Jane? You haven’t talked to Lee in a while. Maybe you should send him a message.

Why go through the trouble of going out and cultivating one new friendship when Facebook lets you meet and befriend hundreds in less time than it takes to watch an episode of “Jersey Shore”?

Every day many people do choose the hundreds of online friends over that one real friend. And what’s truly sad is what we’re teaching our nation’s younger, more impressionable generation. Those born after 1990 have never known a world without the Internet, and it’s clear they’re fully ingrained in the culture of “right now.”

In choosing the cozy, instant world of online socializing and gaming over human interaction and exercise, this generation has broken records (and scales) for childhood obesity. According to the latest findings of the Centers for Disease Control, childhood obesity has more than tripled in the past 30 years.

When I worked at a video-game retailer, I saw much of this behavior firsthand. Children would update their Facebook statuses or tweet from their iPhones while their parents shrugged in a “What can you do?” fashion as they handed me a stack of video games. More often than not, these children were obese.

There are positives to having access to the world at our fingertips. Last year’s violent protests in Iran were made real by the video of Neda Soltan’s death, distributed through sites such as YouTube and Facebook, and footage of the quakes in Haiti helped raise millions of dollars for the rescue efforts. But while many people were called to action by such tragedies, many never made it past the “share” button at the top of their Facebook pages.

When your country leads the way in obesity, it’s time to put down the BlackBerry and pick up a basketball. I’m not advocating a Facebook boycott or a video-game bonfire.

What I am calling for is a little participation in the analog world. Unplug for one day a week. Play flag football instead of Madden 10. Build houses for Habitat for Humanity instead of a barn in Farmville. Meet and befriend real people.

After all, it’s not as if Facebook could give you a ride to the airport.

(You can find the original article HERE)

 
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Posted by on April 23, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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Gap Between Parents and Students

Thought this article was pretty interesting and highlights a gap I often see between what students are doing and what parents think they are doing.

What parents think teens are doing on social networks and what teens are actually doing.

August 9, 2009 |  9:01 pm
Facebook
Teens may not be into Twitter, but 51% say they log into a social network such as Facebook at least once a day. Credit: Gauldo via Flickr.

Do you know where your teens are on the Web tonight?

Most parents aren’t surprised by the most likely answer: social networks. But they may be unsettled by what their kids are doing on those sites, according to a survey to be released Monday by Common Sense Media, a San Francisco advocacy group.

The survey polled 1,013 teens and 1,002 parents. The bottom line: Parents consistently underestimate how much time their kids spend on social networks and how often they engage in risky behavior, such as posting revealing photos of themselves, bullying other kids or hacking into their friends’ accounts. The study mirrors an earlier report from Common Sense Media on kids using technology to cheat in school.

Here’s a sample of the new report’s findings: 

  • 37% of teens said they used social networks to make fun of other students, but only 18% of parents believe their own angels do so.
  • 13% of teens said they posted naked or semi-naked photos or videos of themselves. Only 2% of parents said their kids have done that.
  • 24% of teens said they signed on to someone else’s account without permission, while only 4% of parents said their kids have done that.
  • 28% of teens posted personal information that they normally would not have revealed in public, but 16% of parents said their kids did that.

What to do? Common Sense suggests …

… parents first learn about these networks by registering and exploring the networks their children are in. Because Facebook and MySpace don’t allow kids under 13 to open accounts, parents with younger children should check their browsers’ histories to see where their kids are going.

For parents of teens who are already on social networks, Common Sense suggested they talk with their kids about privacy settings, whom not to friend and precautions to take when posting personal information.

“Remind teens that everything they post can essentially be seen by a vast, invisible audience,” the group said in its report. “And tell them that online stuff can last forever. If they wouldn’t put something on the hallway in school, they shouldn’t post it on their pages.”

– Alex Pham

[the original article can be found HERE)

 
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Posted by on August 16, 2009 in Uncategorized

 

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Social Networking Evil?

Working with students I have been riding the wave of Myspace & Facebook over the past 5 years…and have often wondered; “how much good is this doing for them vs. the bad?” Just last night I was talking about this with a friend and mentioned how it seems like we are getting closer to people that are far away from us (high school friends, family across the country, hobby buddys) and yet farther away from the people close to us (family, friends & pastors). So are these social networking sites doing more harm than good? I liked the response I found on the below article I read this morning.

Everybody Agrees…Twitter & Facebook are Bad

Yesterday I read an article published in the London Telegraph based on an interview with the head of the Catholic Church in England, Archbishop Vincent Nichols. The article recounted the religious leader’s views on social networking sites like Facebook. It stated:

“…the sites are leading teenagers to build ‘transient relationships’ which leave them unable to cope when their social networks collapse. He said the internet and mobile phones were ‘dehumanising’ community life.”  The article continues, “He warned that the sites are contributing to a trend for teenagers to put too much importance on the number of friends they have and that this can ultimately lead to suicide.”

It was especially interesting to me since I just published an article on the topic last month in Collide Magazine. Read the interview with the Archbishop–then my article below–and leave me a comment with your own thoughts.

The Evils of Facebook and Twitter

Interacting online is bad, bad, bad. It is impersonal, and you only do it because you are shallow and like to avoid real life-to-life interaction.

In fact, in the past two months I’ve heard this at least a dozen times from conference speakers and pastors, or I’ve read it in books, magazines or blog posts. It seems to be a belief people are increasingly adopting.

During a conference I attended recently, we were strongly encouraged in the opening session to lay aside blogging, texting, and tweeting during the two-day experience. “Just be in the moment—don’t let yourself get distracted,” the moderator challenged. The advice was evidently ignored because when we came back that night no one was allowed in the auditorium with their electronics. Happy helpers took our phones from us at the door.

About a week later I heard a pastor say, “I’ve been wondering why online communities are so popular. Maybe because it’s a lot harder to put your real arms around someone who smells like beer and vomit and pick them up out of the gutter.”

Then, I heard an author deliver a talk on how technology can trip you up. He told a great story about a time when he had to tell a hospital patient the awful news that they were going to die soon. A few days later he spent time just sitting with the individual as they contemplated their final days. “How could I have done that by email?” he asked the audience. “How effective would my ministry have been to my dying friend through Facebook?”

What? That’s like asking, “How effective would my refrigerator be at grilling a hamburger?” or “What would happen if I used my golf clubs to play tennis?”

Obviously, sending an email does not replace sitting with someone in a time of crisis. And being their friend on Facebook does not have the same level of intimacy as physically picking them up out of the gutter.

But these are straw man arguments made by people who are either afraid of the medium, don’t understand it, have seen people abuse it, or are just ignorant of the value. Whatever the reason, when I hear it I get a little embarrassed for the speaker or writer. It’s like watching someone early last century arguing against people who used cars to travel from place to place. “People who drive are trying to avoid the face-to-face interac¬tion you get from walking down the sidewalk and stopping to chat with the neighbors sitting on their front porch. Do you want to get places faster at the expense of spending time with people?”

If you heard that, you might pull the speaker aside and tell him, “Embrace reality. Don’t be so afraid of change.”

I’ve never heard anyone claim that social networking should replace life-on-life relationships. Quite the opposite—the time I spend in online communities enhances my real-life relationships.

Facebook significantly improves relationships that are no longer proximate to me (either due to geography or schedule). I’ve reconnected with people that I haven’t seen in decades, and I am now “closer” to them than I would have been otherwise.

Twitter allows me to learn along with people I respect. Each day I read dozens of challenging or inspiring quotes, Bible verses, or ideas from thought leaders. Churches are effectively using Twitter to encourage, inform, or challenge their members. This summer, a church in North Carolina is delivering a plan to read through the Psalms in 90 days through the Twitter account @summerpsalms. A New York church delivered a version of the Passion play via Twitter beginning at noon on Good Friday.

There are scores of secondary benefits to social networking, including a deeper connection with my teenaged kids and their worlds, quick feedback on what we are doing as a church, a glimpse into the minds of “outsiders” that think like the people we are trying to reach, and a significant turbo-boost to my learning.

People drive cars. It’s the world we live in. And a growing number of people have integrated Facebook and Twitter and other social networks into the fabric of their lives. In fact, Facebook is visited by more than 225 million people each month, and another 125 million visit MySpace. Twitter lags behind but was reported recently to be growing by 40 percent every 10 days—they added 17 million users in April of this year.

So if you haven’t taken the plunge, jump in. I bet that a balanced life of social networking will give you more time to invest in real-life relationships. See if I’m right.

(taken from Tim Stevens blog…you can find the original post HERE)

 
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Posted by on August 3, 2009 in Uncategorized

 

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