[Web4lib] The end of MySpace, SecondLife, and Twitter

Elizabeth Tarasevich etarasevich at princememorial.lib.me.us
Thu Jun 21 15:13:33 EDT 2007


Gee. I spent my morning in the Children's Wing of a local hospital showing
staff and patients how to download audiobooks and access homework help from
the library's website. Many of these kids are too sick to read, or even look
at computers, but love to be read to - in person. Much better use of a
librarian's time than twittering (pun intended) around in SL. 

Just my opinion, but sometimes I am embarrassed with the obsession of
juvenilia in our profession. 

ET
-----Original Message-----
From: web4lib-bounces at webjunction.org
[mailto:web4lib-bounces at webjunction.org] On Behalf Of Will Kurt
Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2007 2:48 PM
To: web4lib at webjunction.org
Subject: X-Conn Re: [Web4lib] The end of MySpace, SecondLife, and Twitter

I was talking with Jaron Lanier a few months back about Second Life, 
which for obvious reasons he loves (he's the originator of the term 
'virtual reality') Jaron's really into the idea that virtual 
environments, especially those like second life, are experiments in 
new, emerging forms of communication, and I think he's 
right.  Spending time creating an avatar is at least as much an 
experiment in expression as it is escapism.  (for the record: the 
week I played around in SL my avatar had mulch gloves and a burlap cape) .

I think it's a little too much to become over-concerned with the 
ethical implications of one spending more time cultivating an avatar 
then a "real self" (if there is such a thing).

But what are we really debating? MySpace, Twitter, and SL aren't 
ideas: they exist, they have millions of users, and they all make 
tons of money.  They aren't over-hyped because they are successful by 
any standard definition success.  I, personally, am not the biggest 
MySpace fan, but I'm not going to deny that it has changed the way 
many people I know communicate.

These tools are just stepping stones in a long line of transitions 
from one form of communication to another.  As information 
professionals we need to keep up, and understand and participate in 
these things now and as they evolve.

And for the record librarians aren't doing half bad.  There are 
plenty of libraries in SL, that are well built and have a pretty 
reasonable number of people in them.


--Will

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