Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Search Site:
Home | About Us | Subscribe | Contact Us | Archives | Feedback | DH Avenues
News
National
State
District
City
Business
Foreign
Sports
Comments
Edit Page
Panorama
Net Mail
Your Take
Infoline
In City Today
HelpLine
Daily Almanac
Festivals of India
Weather
Leisure
Crossword
Horoscope
Year 2007
Weekly
Daily Astrospeak
Calendar 2007
Pearls of Wisdom
"Take your life in your own hands, and what happens? A terrible thing: no one to blame."
- Erica Jong
Supplements
Economy & Business
Metro Life - Mon
DH Avenues
Cyber Space
Metro Life - Thurs
DH Education
Studying Abroad
Studying In India
Metro Life - Fri
Open Sesame
Metro Life - Sat
Living
DH Realty
Fine Art / Culture
Articulations
Entertainment
Science & Technology
Spectrum
Sportscene
She
Sunday Herald
Reviews
Book Reviews
Movie Reviews
Art Reviews
Columns
Kuldip Nayar
Khushwant Singh
N J Nanporia
Tavleen Singh
Swami Sukhabodhananda
Bittu Sehgal
Suresh Menon
Shreekumar Varma
Movie Guide
Ad Links
Deccan
International School
Real Estate Properties in Bangalore
Deccan Herald
Now Available
Globally
in Print Format
Others
About Us
Subscription

Send your Suggestions / Queries about the Website to the
Webmaster


To send letters to Editor :
Letters to Editor

You are welcome to post your letters/responses to NETMAIL here.

For enquiries on advertisements :
Contact Us

Deccan Herald » Cyber Space » Detailed Story
Collecting friends is the new philately
New sites are making personal relationships more intimate on a global scale. The likes of Facebook have added a fresh layer of communication


It is curious how the globalisation of people is happening much faster than the globalisation of goods.
While trade talks to cut subsidies on products have been immobilised for years, the global expansion of relationships between people is probably the fastest growth area on the planet. I signed up to social websites such as MySpace, Bebo and Facebook mainly to keep up with what is going on.
Not much happened because you have to work hard at entering all your “friends” and personal data to make it worthwhile. Until last week, that is, when my Facebook account suddenly acquired a life of its own.
A couple of people I know here and in the US offered “friendship” (a word that is having its meaning devalued because of all the people who collect “friends” the way some collect stamps).
I accepted, and soon after people I knew who saw my photo on their friend’s list clicked on it offering me friendship – and I added one or two I recognised from their lists.
Pretty soon, in a mini-version of chain letters, there were more than a dozen, with as many in the wings I had never heard of (to whom I didn’t link).
Soon interactive conversations (using text) were taking place over often quite trivial bits of information or comments on photos or pointing out interesting new web sites. You can either correspond with someone privately or reply on your “wall” so everyone can see. There is a function similar to the newly fashionable twitter.com where you simply say what you are doing at that moment, which a lot of people find addictive. Small wonder that active Facebookers don’t email any more: all their friends are there to be communicated with instantly, 24/7 - and you can see which of your friends is online at that moment.
Groups can be set up to attract kindred spirits. There is even one for people who get steamed up because their names are regularly misspelt by others.
Facebook is one of a number of social sites with different attractions. Bebo is much better for checking out bands and has a whiteboard you can draw on, while Rupert’s Space, sorry, MySpace, by far the biggest, is full of in-your-face intrusive adverts.
People invest large amounts of social capital in these sites — spending hours entering photos, address books, videos etc. They can import other sites, such as Flickr.com, so they in effect become a permanent home page from which they don’t move away during the day.
This makes a mockery of statistics based on page views, since users might be hyperactive on the web but seldom move from their home page, thereby embedding their loyalty.
No wonder web giants such as Yahoo!, unable (interestingly) to use their own massive leverage to set up big enough social sites of their own, are gobbling up all the successful new-generation startups.
These new sites are making personal relationships more intimate (based on communal interests or hobbies as well as flirting) on a global scale.
The likes of Facebook have added a fresh layer of communication.
Email facilitates links with people you would never otherwise keep up with.
Text messaging conjures up conversations, 90% of which wouldn’t have happened under previous technologies but only on a one-to-one (national) basis.
The new generation of social sites with libraries of photos of your friends, their friends and their friends’ friends generates a global intimacy that could go on and on.
On Facebook I found myself in contact with friends after midnight about mundane things just because they were online. If I had texted it would have been seen as intrusive — and a telephone call completely over the top.
On such sites you usually chat to people with whom you have a link. In virtual worlds such as Second Life, you, or your avatar, can say Hi and talk with strangers.
I have met people who, after saying Hi to strangers in virtual worlds, claim to do it more often in real life. Goodness knows what will be going on 10 years hence when global relationships come of age.

Victor Keegan
The Guardian

comment on this article
Other Headlines
Collecting friends is the new philately
Counting website visitors: Towards more accuracy
Overlapping backgrounds
E utilities
Ad Links
Flowers to India , Gifts to India
Flowers to India , UAE , Italy, Spain, Thailand, Malaysia, UK
Gifts to India, Flowers to India, Gifts to India, Bangalore, Gifts to India, Mumbai, Delhi, Rakhi
Gifts to India , Flowers to Bangalore India
No minimum balance NRI account
India Flowers - Dehradun Hyderabad Kolkata Gurgaon Punjab
Flowers to India Flowers Gifts Delhi Bangalore Mumbai Chennai
Flowers to Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Delhi, Mumbai, Pune Kolkata.
Send Flowers, Cakes, Chocolate, Fruits to Pune.
Flowers to India , France , Japan, Germany, Hong Kong, Singapore, Mexico, USA
Flowers to India , Mumbai , Pune, Delhi, Chennai,
Your Life Partner? Get personalized proposals daily. Thousands of New members with Photo Profiles. Profession,Religion, Community searches & more. Register FREE!
click here
Copyright 2007, The Printers (Mysore) Private Ltd., 75, M.G. Road, Post Box No 5331, Bangalore - 560001
Tel: +91 (80) 25880000 Fax No. +91 (80) 25880523
200x200
Gender:MaleFemale

Email:

click here
click here