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Subject:Re: Request to take survey From:"Stuart Burnfield" <slb -at- westnet -dot- com -dot- au> To:"Techwr-l" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com> Date:Sun, 14 Aug 2016 12:12:40 +0800
Not to disagree with your broader point, Mark, but I can think of a
counterexample: the Letters section in scientific journals has long
been a place for 'the community' to explore, rebut or amplify earlier
papers.
These are conversations about technical information, albeit a very
slow-moving, Precambrian version of the conversations we see on sites
like Stack Overflow.
--- Stuart
On Thu, Aug 11, 2016 at 8:20 AM, wrote:
>_ I think there is a broad__ misconception_ about what
> "social media" means. Social media is not defined by its subject
matter.
> It is a description of media, not content. Social media are those
media
> that are conversational in nature. Books and traditional websites
are not
> social. They are one way communications. I publish, you read. But
media
> like Facebook, Google Plus, Stack Overflow, and Twitter are social
because
> I publish and you publish back and we create_ a published
conversation._
>
>_ This is a genuinely new media form of the Internet age. We had_
>_ conversations before, and we had publications, but the nearest we
can to_
>_ published conversations was the occasional publication of
collections of_
>_ letters. _
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