They weren't the jocks or the in-crowd, but they were certainly the popular ones. They have information that everyone needs.
One thing I like about this new technological era is that the generations are brought together in a way. The elderly and Boomers as well as X'ers like me deferred to our young betters. They felt helpful and they were.
I love how technology doesn't discriminate. Old, young, fit, flabby, plain or fabulous, you can be a part of this world.
This Stanford study would seem to disagree with me in some ways. For example, the more people use the internet:
... the more they lose contact with their social environment.But I don't know if this is true. When my friends and family are online, we talk back and forth via chatting. The information might not rise to the level of a phone call. In fact, I don't really like talking on the phone anyway. In some ways, the internet has connected people.
This effect is noticeable even with just 2-5 Internet hours/week, and it rises substantially for those spending more that 10 hours/week, of whom up to 15 percent report a decrease in social activities. Even more striking is the fact that Internet users spend much less time of talking on the phone to friends and family: the percentage reporting a decrease exceeds 25 percent - although it is unclear to what extent this represents a shift to e-mail even in communicating with friends and family, or a technical bottleneck due to a single phone line being preempted by Internet use.
What do you think?
Not with family but with other human beings for sure since I tend to be a loner by nature. I like the fact that you can touch base via internet and still have your privacy.
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