Monday 26 November 2007

Internet Community

One thing the internet has brought back into many of our lives is a sense of community. It may be a shame that this huge impersonal technological beast was the catalyst for this rediscovery but that would be a petty quibble – it is nice to have it back.

Newsgroups, discussion forums, message boards, support sites, chat rooms, blogs, MySpace, social networking, there are a myriad of sites that invite our involvement. We are communicating with large groups of individuals on a daily basis and, on the whole, our lives are being enriched as a result.

On Amazon, other readers will tell you what they thought of the books they bought and you can see what other titles they like to read. On social networking sites people are brought together based on their interests, the music they like, the places they visit etc. Support forums can be saviours. I recently had a problem with my laptop, posted a question on a computer support forum and 6 people quickly responded with suggestions and advice. Two of them kept helping out, offering detailed step-by-step instructions, until the issue was resolved. I have never met these people, I don’t even know their real names. They had nothing to gain from helping out, it was just a nice thing to do.

3 comments:

i beati said...

amen

The Paris Apartment said...

Well said. the internet community means everything to me.

halleluiah!

Pauline Rowson said...

This is going to be where the real power lies, I don't mean power as in the traditional sense i.e. money, exploitation, rips off - I mean us ordinary people banding together to make a difference to change the way society reacts, and to help each other in many different ways, as per your example. Gosh, I sound evangelical now! I just think the Internet has given the 'small, ordinary person' a voice. The big companies and brands are just waking up to this, (well some of them are) and are muscling in on the action. Interesting to see how it evolves. Only hope the power crisis doesn't curtail it! Or is that just grumpy old media speak?