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January 22, 2008

Social Technology is also Social (in real life)

Wired is running a story on how social networking technologies support, rather than diminish real-life networks of people:

Technology makes it more fun and more profitable to live and work close to the people who matter most to your life and work. Harvard economist Ed Glaeser, an expert on city economies, argues that communications technology and face-to-face interactions are complements like salt and pepper, rather than substitutes like butter and margarine. Paradoxically, your cell phone, email, and Facebook networks are making it more attractive to meet people in the flesh. [...]

In big cities, our communication tools are especially helpful because they keep us from getting lost in the crowd (which is not something you worry about in a one-street town). There are even services that tell you where your friends are by locating their cell signals.

New technologies can strengthen ties within your business, too. A 2007 study by economists Neil Gandal, Charles King, and Marshall Van Alstyne looked at the networks formed by 125,000 email messages from the staff of an executive-recruiting firm. It found that email's real value isn't in communicating with Kuala Lumpur but with Betsy in the next cubicle. The most productive workers have the densest intracompany email web.

This is nothing terribly new; it's reaffirmation of Jane Jacob's view of economies of agglomeration in cities; as well as more recent studies showing essentially the same things; the "weak links" of email and other online communication bolster local interaction.

December 20, 2007

Teens and Social Media

Pew Internet and American Life Project has a new report out on Teens and Social Media; finding that girls are the leading content creators (excepting video posts), and:

There is a subset of teens who are super-communicators -- teens who have a host of technology options for dealing with family and friends, including traditional landline phones, cell phones, texting, social network sites, instant messaging, and email. They represent about 28% of the entire teen population and they are more likely to be older girls.

It's interesting to think about this through the lens of Mark Granovetter's Strenth of Weak Ties lens. The Internet, and the increasingly social nature of it, is so blatantly a fantastic tool at supporting and expanding "weak" ties.

September 01, 2006

Technology and personal networks


I'm reading Technology and Social Inclusion, which is a fascinating book on the role of ICT in development, looking internationally and within underserved/poor/rural US communities as well. Today on Slashdot, there's a story on the Internet improving, not replacing social ties/networks, which connects well both with the Human/Social resources chapters of this book on the importance of communties of practice and social networks, and of course the social capital theories of Granovetter and crowd.