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All your base are belong to us.

The year was nineteen ninety something.  A strapping young chap entered the world of technology.  With overpromises from tech leads, undertrained programmers, and caffeine, there was nothing we couldn’t conquer. 

Or something like that.

I’ve pretty much been in technology all my “professional” life…save it being a small sting of leadership consulting right out of college that a totaled car at Duquesne solved that decision for me….but that’s another story.  I’ve grown up around programming, I’ve programmed like the worst of them and I am a better person for ‘thinking aloud’ and learning what others are doing to make me better.

Over the past 2 years I, like many of you, have entered in the world of what seems to be called “social media” or “new media.”  No, I’m not about to claim I’m one of them (warning may be NSFW with language).  But I will say I’m a user, dare I say a power user.  I didn’t get on the MySpace train because at the time I just didn’t get it and it didn’t look tailored for me.  I gave up my Geocities account long ago and didn’t feel the need to start a new one with MySpace :-).  I joke, as I know it is valuable for some social circles, just not mine…some pages make my eyes bleed.

Enter Facebook.  I list my LinkedIn account in my contact information, but I’ll be honest with you – I don’t use it.  I also stopped using Plaxo as a result of company IT restraints.  So apologies to all you Plaxo Pulse invitations…I’m not responding to them.  All of these networks seem to share the currency of “friends” in their taxonomy.  It got out of control fast on Facebook for me with tons (well relatively speaking of course) started sending friend requests.  Are these really my friends? I had to ask myself this.  But being the people-pleaser I think I am and not wanting to offend most I just started accepting them all.  Thus, my Facebook friends have gotten out of control.

Enter Twitter.  This gave us all an outlet to strip down to “status” updates.  I signed up immediately and thought it was lame.  What possible use could this be for me?  Of course I was wrong and it has been the single-most useful social tool I leverage.  I use it daily and treat it just like what I think it is – a conversation I can enter/leave/comment on at any time.  There is a friend (follower) concept, but it is easier to deal with because people can choose to follow me if I’m public (more on that later).  And I can choose who I want to follow and there doesn’t have to be a mutual connection of permission between the two.  I like that.

Enter my wife.  She’s a wonderful woman.  She’s super smart and super talented.  For years she’s made fun of my geekiness.  For a while I was McGeeky to her friends.  She would mock me in her speak (she still does sometimes).  But then something changed.  A genuine interest in certain things.  It started with her retiring from her job.  She still wanted to be connected, so got a laptop.  I introduced her to GMail.  Later she started asking what’s this blog stuff?  Soon enough she started a blog – more for journaling our family life and her perspective on it with parenting, etc.  Her blogging has exploded.  She has more posts than me combined over the 6 years I’ve been blogging.  It’s frightening and fun at the same time.  I love to see her spunky personality come through in her writing.  Then came Facebook.  Then came Twitter.

Fast forward to a few weeks ago.  We were on date night and started talking about all this stuff.  It was a surreal moment that my wife would actually want to talk about tech stuff.  You see, she has become a power Twitter user among her friends.  Her Blackberry probably sparked a lot of this with text messaging with her friends and now she also uses Twitter via her mobile!  She signed up, they signed up and she’s really using it a lot.  For now for just fun stuff, but I see her use grow more…as does her followers.  She even took a web seminar about how to use Twitter effectively.  In this conversation she asked me what’s the point for Facebook if I have Twitter?  Good question.  It was good timing as well because on that day Seesmic released their Facebook desktop application which did one thing – essentially boil Facebook down to a status stream.  As we talked about this I realized that my use of Facebook was tiny.  Beyond looking at a friend you hadn’t seen in a while and then checking out their pictures, my use boiled down to the status stream.  It was an interesting conversation we had that night.  And weird.

Since then my wife has been opening my eyes to some things.  I kept seeing these tweets of I’ve listed myself in localtweeps.com under zip code XXXX.  So me being part of the nerd sheep, I added myself.  Then I got a lesson in privacy from my wife.  She convinced me in less than a minute that wasn’t a good idea.  Again, we had a good conversation about it.  She even pointed out that people who block their Twitter stream but post it to Facebook via the linking, aren’t really blocking anything.  I actually didn’t even make the obvious connection.

Now within the past week she’s asked me about tools and I believe she started using Twhirl.  Her latest tweet had a TwitPic URL in it. 

WHAT HAVE I CREATED!?

Seriously it is fun and bazaar at the same time.  I love to see my wife blogging, twittering, and bringing technology into her life.  Some of it concerns me, but I can’t judge…my thoughts are pretty much an open book on the web.  So why am I writing all this and wasting precious whitespace on the interwebs?  Who knows…but just thoughts I had as my worlds have converged a bit.  It reminds me of a Seinfeld episode where Jerry and Elaine contemplate inviting George’s girlfriend on an outing.  Kramer points out:

Jerry, don't you see? This world here, this is George's sanctuary. If Susan comes into contact with this world, his worlds collide. You know what happens then? (Kramer raises his hands into the air and slowly brings them together in an explosion.) – from “The Pool Guy” episode

It’s like Relationship George and Independent George.  Except for me it is Husband Tim and Geek Tim.  Worlds colliding my friend, worlds colliding.


This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution By license.


4/8/2009 9:27 PM | # re: Technology, Social Media seeping into my home
My day turned dark the moment I hooked my wife up with a Black Jack II (when we first moved to the states). Now between Twitter and Facebook I can't escape her watch over me... no more "sorry I didn't call when I was away in Vegas, i was real busy".

"No you weren't, you were out partying with @bgoldy, @michaeldorian and @damianedwards.. couldn't find time huh?"

WOW... owned..

I wonder how many divorces have been created since Twitter/Facebook was introduced?
4/8/2009 9:37 PM | # re: Technology, Social Media seeping into my home
Great stuff....my wife came up the other night and asked about something I had tweeted that made it on Facebook. Although it was nothing important, it made me realize I need to tweet with care.
4/10/2009 11:39 PM | # re: Technology, Social Media seeping into my home
Relationship George and Independent George! Why didn't I think of that the other day when making the comparison.
4/22/2009 8:52 AM | # re: Technology, Social Media seeping into my home
Hey, that's a topic which has gotten somewhat sore with me lately. I mean not the introduction of technology in people's lives though, but the philosophical perspective of the whole facebook, linkedin et al. stuff, because it's kind of fascinating to observe people reflecting, simulating and interconnecting their personalities. And there's this friend-collecting obsession again. The leitmotif of my sentiment about this is just like you put it here, these people mostly aren't the friends, they are just, you know, there.
6/3/2009 8:30 AM | # re: Technology, Social Media seeping into my home
Social media is everywhere now, and I think that's beneficial to everyone. I use Facebook to speak to friends, Howto.com to learn things, LinkedIn at work - and best of all, it's free. The more the better I say
8/26/2009 3:15 PM | # re: Technology, Social Media seeping into my home
I just recently signed on to twitter and it is so much more beneficial than I ever thought it would be. The difference (for me) between facebook and twitter is that fb is mostly for personal use and twitter mostly business. The thing I love about social media is that the line between the two becomes a little fuzzy. It just makes the work stuff that much more interesting. ...but I guess, as you guys are saying, it can cause some tension if you're not careful.
12/14/2009 12:29 AM | # re: Technology, Social Media seeping into my home
I have been playing around a lot lately with social media and its starting to become really fun. It makes you realize how connected the internet really is. you make a post here you can have it show up on another site with a rss feed. Absolutely amazing.

 
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