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Disconnection

Dave Pell:

I worry that this pervasive and seamless socialization can ooze into our personal relationships and potentially dilute the value of friendship as well. If I order two copies of photos of my kids so I can send some to you, that is one manifestation of my affection; I "like" you. If I email you those same photos, it's less effort for me, but the meaning is similar. But what if I share those same photos on a public blog or with a few hundred folks on Facebook? Hasn't that very personal connection between you and me been watered down?
An old friend called me on Saturday.

"How have you been?" I asked.

"Good, good, just on my way to the supermarket, my 10 minutes of quiet now that the baby's home."

"The baby?"

"Yeah, she was born two weeks ago."

"She was? Congrats! I had no idea."

"I posted it on Facebook, didn't you see it? That was basically my one communication to the outside world."

Not long ago big news was delivered via telephone. Then, for a while, email moved in. Now we're onto notifications, posted to third-party locations on the assumption that everyone of consequence is dialed into them. What's the next step? How much between now and then might we miss?

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