Sunday, February 22, 2009

Tweetering mini-Blogs

I found an article in NYTimes.com about bloggers and microbloggers. The article discusses the reality of microbloggers, and simply states that microbloggers are done by an older audience and may serve as an alternative to younger audiences who blog and use social networking sites such as facebook. In addition, the article mentions a survey done by Amanda Lenhart of Pew Internet and American Life Project stating:
"...microbloggers are more likely to live in cities than the average Internet user...9 percent live in rural areas, as compared to 17 percent of all Internet users" (Mindling).
I think that the survey appropriately states a microbloggers identity in that microbloggers may have a greater chance of living in the city simply because the norm of any city. A major city typically houses people that often have to be updated in technology and are constantly updating their status. These people are students, bankers, entrepreneurs, etc. In addition, it serves no surprise to me that I, as a younger audience, am put under the blogger umbrella because I do hold an account in a blogging engine site such as MySpace and not Twitter, a microblogging engine.

The "Acta Diurna" of Today

From carving stories on pieces of stone or wood, to posting entries on MySpace and You Tube, we have greatly revolutionized the way we communicate our news. Today, our Acta Diurna, or "daily acts" consists of picking up our cell phone or getting on a computer to view the latest news. The chapter in Citizen Marketers begins to explains how powerful a publisher or broadcaster may be, starting with the astounding tool created by Johann Gutenberg, the printing press. The authors appropriately state the importance of the discovery of the printing press when stating:

"...the printing press made the production of books--in fact, the production of knowledge--a catalyst for changing culture. A new cultural die had been cast. Truth had been democratized. Society had been wrecked and rebuilt in new and egalitarian ways" (74).

I agree with the authors, because before the printing press, much of the media was controlled by the church. The church had the upper hand because of the difficulty of mass production. And today, similar to what was going on with the church, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is put in place to monitor communication through the airways, but that is were podcast come into play. Podcast make it possible to distribute communication to a vast audience with the assistance of iTunes; this is done without the needed approval of the FCC.

Our Acta Diurna has undoubtedly changed since the time of the Romans, but are still done for the same reason, to gossip and be well informed in the latest news.