I came across a post from 2009 about social media. 10 years later, with the knowledge of how much data we use today, it's quite a read.
Here it is in its full glory.
Social Media Is Changing Everything: October 18th, 2009
My son won't use e-mail the way I did. So how will people communicate and collaborate in the next wave of communications?
Here is a peek into the difference that is taking hold. I was looking at recent phone use. The numbers you are about to see are from the first 20 days of our current billing cycle.
My wife, Jennifer, has used 21 text messages and 38 MB of data.
I have used 120 text messages and 29 MB of data.
My son, at college, used 420 text messages, and is on a WiFi campus so doesn't use 3G data.
My son, in high school, used 5,798 text messages and 472 MB of data.
How can that be? That level of emotional sluttiness makes porn seem downright wholesome.
But, of course, that isn't how he sees it. He is holding many conversations at once. Some are social; some are about the logistics of who, what, when, where and why ... some are even about homework. Yet, most don't use full sentences, let alone paragraphs. There is near instant gratification. And, the next generation of business people will consider this normal.
Is social media a fad? Or is it the biggest shift since the Industrial Revolution?
Welcome to the World of Socialnomics. This video has a bunch of interesting statistics ... and is fun to watch.
Social Media Is Changing Everything: April 20th, 2019
Looking at the stats from 2009 is pretty funny
My son was using 472 MB of data a month
Hulu had grown from to 373 million total streams in April 2009
Only 25% of Americans in the past month said they watched a short video on their phone
For some context, I looked up the comparative numbers for 2018.
I picked a random month in 2018 ... in August my son used 10.85 GB of data. He doesn't text as often - but has sent/received 282,000 snapchats since downloading it 5 years ago.
Hulu has over 20 million subscribers who streamed more than 26 million hours a day in 2018
People spend over five hours a day on their smartphones on average. 70% of web traffic happens on a mobile device, and more than 50% of videos are watched on mobile (93% of twitter videos).
Here's what happens every minute of every day on the internet
I came across a post from 2009 about social media. 10 years later, with the knowledge of how much data we use today, it's quite a read.
Here it is in its full glory.
Social Media Is Changing Everything: October 18th, 2009
My son won't use e-mail the way I did. So how will people communicate and collaborate in the next wave of communications?
Here is a peek into the difference that is taking hold. I was looking at recent phone use. The numbers you are about to see are from the first 20 days of our current billing cycle.
My wife, Jennifer, has used 21 text messages and 38 MB of data.
I have used 120 text messages and 29 MB of data.
My son, at college, used 420 text messages, and is on a WiFi campus so doesn't use 3G data.
My son, in high school, used 5,798 text messages and 472 MB of data.
How can that be? That level of emotional sluttiness makes porn seem downright wholesome.
But, of course, that isn't how he sees it. He is holding many conversations at once. Some are social; some are about the logistics of who, what, when, where and why ... some are even about homework. Yet, most don't use full sentences, let alone paragraphs. There is near instant gratification. And, the next generation of business people will consider this normal.
Is social media a fad? Or is it the biggest shift since the Industrial Revolution?
Welcome to the World of Socialnomics. This video has a bunch of interesting statistics ... and is fun to watch.
Social Media Is Changing Everything: April 20th, 2019
Looking at the stats from 2009 is pretty funny
My son was using 472 MB of data a month
Hulu had grown from to 373 million total streams in April 2009
Only 25% of Americans in the past month said they watched a short video on their phone
For some context, I looked up the comparative numbers for 2018.
I picked a random month in 2018 ... in August my son used 10.85 GB of data. He doesn't text as often - but has sent/received 282,000 snapchats since downloading it 5 years ago.
Hulu has over 20 million subscribers who streamed more than 26 million hours a day in 2018
People spend over five hours a day on their smartphones on average. 70% of web traffic happens on a mobile device, and more than 50% of videos are watched on mobile (93% of twitter videos).
Here's what happens every minute of every day on the internet
Social Media Is Changing Everything: A Reprisal
I came across a post from 2009 about social media. 10 years later, with the knowledge of how much data we use today, it's quite a read.
Here it is in its full glory.
Social Media Is Changing Everything: October 18th, 2009
My son won't use e-mail the way I did. So how will people communicate and collaborate in the next wave of communications?
Here is a peek into the difference that is taking hold. I was looking at recent phone use. The numbers you are about to see are from the first 20 days of our current billing cycle.
How can that be? That level of emotional sluttiness makes porn seem downright wholesome.
But, of course, that isn't how he sees it. He is holding many conversations at once. Some are social; some are about the logistics of who, what, when, where and why ... some are even about homework. Yet, most don't use full sentences, let alone paragraphs. There is near instant gratification. And, the next generation of business people will consider this normal.
Is social media a fad? Or is it the biggest shift since the Industrial Revolution?
Welcome to the World of Socialnomics. This video has a bunch of interesting statistics ... and is fun to watch.
Other Resources:
Social Media Is Changing Everything: April 20th, 2019
Looking at the stats from 2009 is pretty funny
For some context, I looked up the comparative numbers for 2018.
Here's what happens every minute of every day on the internet
via Lori Lewis and Chadd Callahan
A little different than 2009 ...
Posted at 01:37 PM in Business, Current Affairs, Gadgets, Games, Healthy Lifestyle, Ideas, Just for Fun, Market Commentary, Movies, Music, Personal Development, Pictures, Science, Sports, Web/Tech | Permalink
Reblog (0)