View Full Version : Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, oh my!
Ok, so I finally caved and took the smartphone that my job was throwing at me. It does make it a bit easier to plan while on business trips, as they sometimes go to odd little fjordy places where ferries are irregular and internet access can be hard to find. But now I also have two more things to distract me - Twitter and Instagram, in addition to Facebook where I spend way too much time already. I follow my friends and a few colleagues, and am beginning to follow strangers.
So who do you follow on social media, and more importantly, why? Like most people I guess, I follow people who are interested in the same things I am - bike advocacy, popular science, green living especially sustainable eating, ski mountaineering, kayaking, favourite sci-fi/fantasy writers, the occasional interesting politician. But I'm beginning to realize I'd probably learn a lot more interesting stuff from following people I disagree with!
I haven't bothered searching tags either on Twitter or Instagram, I just sort of click around. For those of you who use social media - how do you use it and what do you get out of it?
Catrin
05-14-2014, 03:24 AM
LOL LPH, love the thread title. I don't know how much help this will be, but I don't do much outside of Facebook. I check that MUCH too often, and I've recently pruned the pages I "follow" or "like", which is different from my "friends". I will follow the pages of cycling, kettlebell, or other activity related folks. I used to follow/like more activity related association pages but dropped many of them because they seemed to be more about a Facebook advertising page than providing real information. Of course all association pages will have some of that, but many of those I was following were 90-100% ads. No time for that! I've been on FB for something like 5 years now, and I've only just started following strangers.
I've Instagram, Pintrest, and Twitter accounts. I even have subscriptions, etc. I rarely, however, even think about checking them :o I would suggest to just explore as you have time, it is always interesting to me the different ways that individuals interact with social media. I seem to be backing off from it, while others I know appear to be using it more and more. Take what is useful to you and leave the rest :D Social media IS a time-suck, albeit at times a very useful one!
Crankin
05-14-2014, 03:26 AM
I don't use Twitter or Instagram, I just don't see the point, and, as you point out, they are a time suck. I mean, I love researching and learning, but I don't have the time for sitting and being on line all of the time. I am on Facebook, and look at it way too much, but I don't post very much. I stay away from making any political comments, although I do follow some politically oriented things. I use it mostly to keep up with friends far away.
I find it interesting that my kids, who are in the prime demographic for these things, both think Twitter is silly. My older son had his Facebook hacked (he didn't tell me what happened, but I think his photos were used in a very inappropriate way) and has not gone back. Considering that he had 300+ friends and planned and orchestrated his high school reunion through Facebook, I am surprised. My other son has had a love hate relationship with Facebook. He was not on at all, until right before he finished his last tour in Afghanistan and was out of the military. Then, all of a sudden, last fall, he deactiviated his account. About a week ago, I noticed he was back on. I think this was related to the fact that he was getting his security clearance re-upped, so he has to appear squeaky clean.
You could spend all day looking at stuff, and it's really easy to get addicted.
ny biker
05-14-2014, 07:34 AM
For me, Facebook is primarily a way to stay in touch with friends, family, former co-workers, that sort of thing. It is especially useful with people who live far away and friends who have less free time since they moved into the young-children phase of life. I check it a few times a day. I also post my planned bike rides there so that people will know where to tell the police to look if I disappear.
Twitter is primarily for news and entertainment, and I check it often because I find it very useful. I follow a bunch of local weather people, as well as a few who cover the area where my parents live. I also follow some reporters/columnists from the Washington Post (my local newspaper) and a news blog for Arlington County, where I live. Also some official county accounts for Arlington and Fairfax (where I work). Twitter has actually become my first source of news -- when a big storm is coming or something big happens, I hear about it first on Twitter. It's also a good way for me to follow sports that don't get much attention in the US, like cycling and Formula 1, and in fact I first signed up for it in order to follow cycling. And it's a good way to follow sports teams from major US sports (like baseball) that are based in other cities (Let's go Mets!) and the college teams that my nephews play for. I also follow a few comedians on Twitter for entertainment.
Last year a few relatives signed up for Twitter, and we use it as a kind of enhanced text message service. It's easier to communicate with a group on Twitter than via texting, as long as you're discussing things that don't require a higher level of privacy.
I have also set up a couple of lists of Twitter accounts that I don't follow but would like to access easily sometimes, such as local traffic reports and a longer list of weather people for the area where my parents live. I use the latter when major storms are in their forecast so I can monitor the situation.
I don't use Instagram. I have a Linked In account as a way of being able to stay in touch with former co-workers, though I don't do much with it.
Irulan
05-14-2014, 07:38 AM
I use twitter for information. Example - I follow our local newspaper which always has up to the minute stuff posted ( Monroe and Stevens closed due to collision) things like that. I do follow a few friends who post entertaining life comments.
Facebook - I'm pretty picky about who I'll friend, but that line is starting to blur with all the women's biking activity I'm involved in this year. I use the "restricted access" feature a lot for people who want to friend me but that I have no interest in allowing them to see my stuff. Lists are a really good way to organize who sees what if you care to manage your list like that. I made a pages feed for the pages I want to follow - local businesses and organizations mostly. You have to follow George Takei's feed and Humans of New York. Most of the organizations I am involved with use FB as the primary form of communication.
Blogs, I follow a few, mainly gear reviews and sports related. Again, I like information much more than experiences. I use the Newsify reader on my iPad.
I do not use or follow instagram although I see things through other links.
I use pinterest strictly for personal idea collecting and to surf when I am bored.
Except for the Think Progress feed on FB I stay away from poliitcal stuff.
Well, I sure got what I was looking for! I threw in a comment on a Twitter discussion today, and ended up spending the rest of the day (sh! don't tell my boss) discussing environmental politics with a local politician I heartily disagree with. Civil, but a bit... pointed. I'm having trouble leaving the discussion. That's the problem with people you disagree with, I guess, hard to leave when they're STILL SO WRONG! :-D
But at some point I will just have to say Thanks and goodbye.
Irulan
05-14-2014, 08:02 AM
internet rule #1. You can't change anyone's mind. So don't bother trying.
Heheh. Yeah, I know. But I enjoy honing my arguments. Some of the minor points may sink in, and someone else could be reading too. But no, I am not going to convince him that it does matter if half a million Norwegians drive their cars less.
ny biker
05-14-2014, 11:44 AM
I really try to avoid political discussions on social media. I also am not big on them in face-to-face conversation. I usually don't think of the really good things to say until it's too late. When someone posts or shares something that I disagree with on Twitter or Facebook, I just try to take a deep breath and ignore it.
One thing that is important to teach the young people in your life -- things you post on social media really can come back to haunt you. The managers at my job do look up job candidates online and they consider what they see before deciding to offer someone a job.
Helene2013
05-14-2014, 04:54 PM
Although the pressure is high that I join FB and the likes, I'm still not there. But I do lurk in some profiles and it is freaky what you can find out in those profiles, who they are connected to, etc. I don't see the need for this in my life. for now anyway. I do enough web as it is. I don't need to have a mass population follow me in every detail. I understand you can block off your profile to only selected people, etc. But then what is the real point of creating those sites???? If someone wants to know what I'm up to, give me a call or send me an email. :p
thekarens
05-14-2014, 05:13 PM
I use twitter for the same reason Irulan does, it's my news source. I follow people like Amazon for sales, local news station and then I follow interest groups like Tropical Birding and Engadget. I never post. I don't use Instagram. I get all my photos on FB.
rebeccaC
05-14-2014, 11:05 PM
I've never been interested in facebook, instagram, twitter etc. I keep in touch with some friends through their blogs and then texts, calls and face to face. I post to some photography sites, this site and occasionally two other bicycle ones. I quickly check a number of blogs each day to read new posts. Other than that I use a commuter for just work, research for personal things, some in-depth news and photography. Never found arguing with someone on the net to be a very rewarding experience...:(
Catrin
05-15-2014, 03:39 AM
It is useful for keeping in touch with select individuals - which is mainly what I use it for. I do have my profile settings so that only those I've "friended" (see how it creeps into your vocabulary by creating non-existent verbs?) can see it. I also make use of custom lists because I figure my family couldn't care less about my kettlebell or other fitness activities or vice versa, for example. My actual posts only really deal with fitness and the occasional cool picture or sharing of a motivational quite. I will not get more personal than that as everything on the internet stays there. I've been more personal on TE than I've been on FB, but that is different, and there are topics I won't post about here for the same reason.
Haven't thought about using Twitter for news though, will have to see if that works for me. I tend to be too busy to pay much attention to the news and if I can get it from Twitter without a firehose stream of notifications then that might be a good approach.
OakLeaf
05-15-2014, 04:49 AM
17109
I gave up on flame wars about the same time I left Compuserve ... ;)
I do FB only - I use it to keep up with friends, to get notifications from organizations I belong to, and as my primary news aggregator.
DH does Twitter only, and it's an ENORMOUS time suck to him. He justifies it because of the news feed - if anyone remembers CNN back when they first started in the 1980s, kind of like that, but obviously even less filtered - but then he gets into back and forths with newspaper editors, plays the Twitter games, etc., etc. ....
Irulan
05-15-2014, 09:40 AM
I sure do love that xkcd comic. I survived a whole lot of flame wars on usenet. It cured me of internet arguing.
ny biker
05-15-2014, 10:21 AM
This just in via the twitter: new Foo Fighters album will be released this fall.
(And if I had not been stupid enough to unfollow the 9:30 Club in DC, I would have known about the surprise Foo Fighters show there last week before it happened...)
And if I hadn't been on Twitter recently I wouldn't have known that Neil Gaiman is currently in Syria, and will be coming to Norway in a week. The first is rather heartbreaking, the second is making me a little giddy.
Crankin
05-15-2014, 01:02 PM
Ok, now I know why Twitter doesn't appeal to me. I don't know who Neil Gaiman is... I do know the Foo Fighters, but only as a group DS #1 likes.
I am a popular culture idiot. Rarely go to the movies, don't care that much about music, and the celebrity craziness kinda makes me ill. While I do eventually watch some of the current movies at home, I go to the theatre maybe 1-2X a year, usually for an independent film I've read about. Even if I like a song, I couldn't tell you who sings it. I've always been like that, and it was a detriment when I taught at the gym and people would ask "who sings that," about a song on my tapes. I think at the height of the 60s/early 70s music boom, when my friends went to concerts every weekend, I saw maybe 4-5 in high school, college, grad school.
Yeah, get my news from the (gasp) newspaper, which I read in paper form, unless it's freeezing or icy and I can't get down my driveway to get it. Then I resort to the I Pad. I watch local and network news every night, unless I am out for dinner. See, I am turning into my parents!
Irulan
05-15-2014, 01:10 PM
Hmm, what did I get off today's twitter? Not much that has to do with pop culture or entertainment, that is for sure. Right now I see lots of different stuff about Idaho same sex marriage law debate from the local newspaper who is getting it from a bunch of different sources, the Science Porn feed, misc biking (mtb4her, betterride, bike shop girl), Obama's feed and a few misc friends.
I'm @geargrrl if anyone cares
ny biker
05-15-2014, 01:34 PM
Ok, now I know why Twitter doesn't appeal to me. I don't know who Neil Gaiman is... I do know the Foo Fighters, but only as a group DS #1 likes.
I am a popular culture idiot. Rarely go to the movies, don't care that much about music, and the celebrity craziness kinda makes me ill. While I do eventually watch some of the current movies at home, I go to the theatre maybe 1-2X a year, usually for an independent film I've read about. Even if I like a song, I couldn't tell you who sings it. I've always been like that, and it was a detriment when I taught at the gym and people would ask "who sings that," about a song on my tapes. I think at the height of the 60s/early 70s music boom, when my friends went to concerts every weekend, I saw maybe 4-5 in high school, college, grad school.
Yeah, get my news from the (gasp) newspaper, which I read in paper form, unless it's freeezing or icy and I can't get down my driveway to get it. Then I resort to the I Pad. I watch local and network news every night, unless I am out for dinner. See, I am turning into my parents!
Well you wouldn't have to follow any pop culture stuff if you didn't want to. Twitter can provide breaking news on a local, national and international level. It has come in handy for me when there was a major Metro (subway) accident a few years back, and when we had to evacuate our office building after an apparent earthquake it was Twitter that told me where the quake was centered and how strong it was (and that I should text my cousin to have her contact her son, who lived near the epicenter). It provides information on power outages and broken water mains in my neighborhood. And it was invaluable during hurricane Sandy.
It's easy to tailor it to your tastes and preferences, and it's also easy to unfollow anyone if you decide you're not interested in their posts.
salsabike
05-15-2014, 02:20 PM
And if I hadn't been on Twitter recently I wouldn't have known that Neil Gaiman is currently in Syria, and will be coming to Norway in a week. The first is rather heartbreaking, the second is making me a little giddy.
Yes to both of those! I really like his work. Now you all have me interested in Twitter as a news device. lph, what were you following to get that news? His account?
I am very much a FB user and have found it a great way to show friends all over the globe great pictures--from bike rides, from our Iceland trip, etc., interesting art sources like thisiscolossal.com and streetartutopia.com, and the kind of science-geeky stuff a lot of us love, like NASA 360 and NASA's Earth Observatory. Seeing everyone's Mom pictures on Mother's Day was a total delight. Often I learn about totally wonderful stuff like 2Cellos from friends on FB. Etc. Most of my friends avoid politics. Lots of bike ride pics. Music. Art. Family and friend pics. Explore.org (thanks to TE's yellow for that one)--live animal and nature cams. A wealth of delightful and interesting stuff.
Irulan
05-15-2014, 02:28 PM
With any of this stuff, you can get totally overwhelmed or take a few minutes to learn about it and how you might or might now use it.
I don't quite get Instagram, and LinkedIn seems pretty useless to me.
shootingstar
05-15-2014, 04:45 PM
I don't subscribe to Facebook and occasionally I wish I did...just to comment on major Canadian newspaper articles. I find it really limiting that some newspaper websites only allow FAcebook comments. That's it. 'Cause there have been interesting/hot local articles on cycling, sustainable urban planning, etc.
But my good close friends nor are my family members aren't into Facebook. Nor do I twitter. So not missing much in terms of personal relationships.
I only used Twitter via my partner's account when I was helping him organize a cycling conference and promoting it, plus his business. I actually don't see the point of Instagram. I don't expect my friends and family hanging onto every photo I take.
I unsubscribed from LinkedIn. I was getting invites, etc. from people who were completely unrelated to my profession, my personal interests. Forget it. Though I have a strong resume, worked for some very interesting employers, I am stunned that people shlep out their resume/work history in whole world of strangers. I only do it for jobs that I specifically apply online at an employer's website.
Other than email, I do consider my blog(s)', social media. My personal blog has been a way to share photos and short posts about things I've seen, in a more permanent way for people who know me well since I live over 1,000 km. away. They are probably gettin' to know a part of me, that they knew about vaguely my whole life so far, but now, via my blog, more about some of interests/passions. (Yea, I am the sister who cycles..but now the blog, shows what I think about cycling. So it's a great way for me to chat up on a topic and if the person is not interested, fine.)
I don't "follow" other bloggers...I bookmark them. Rationale: I don't want a pile of incoming email alerts. I just will visit blogs that I like. They tend to cover: cycling, fitness, food, travel and other stuff I've been interested long time. I like sharing chatter with other regular blogger-readers.
True, that employers/employees can check up on me. Oh well. I have to say, that I try to keep my personal blog quite clean in language and not overly controversial (however cycling as a lifestyle can be controversial for some folks). I don't rant much on my personal blog because it just takes a lot of energy for me to rant in coherent paragraphs online and in the end, for me, it doesn't do much for me. Better I talk it out with friends. I am vaguely conscious that my personal blog..will be part of a legacy of me-- a digital footprint. I do see my blog a partial distillation of the best of me and a snapshot essence of "me" reflected how I take photos, photos of my artwork, how I think on certain topics, etc.
rebeccaC
05-15-2014, 06:04 PM
And if I hadn't been on Twitter recently I wouldn't have known that Neil Gaiman is currently in Syria, and will be coming to Norway in a week. The first is rather heartbreaking, the second is making me a little giddy.
Well that generated a interesting conversation at work about The Sandman series :).
According to a colleague at work he's researching Syrian refugee camps in Jordan, yes heartbreaking! Maybe a book or doc.
Rebecca, check out the 4 minute interview the BBC news did with him, he's reposted it. It's very moving.
Crankin, Twitter has just as much, or as little, to do with popular culture as a newspaper does. It's there, alongside local and international news. The difference is that you can interact more. I follow Neil Gaiman because I enjoy his writing. Because of that I now know more about the refugee situation in Syria on a personal level than I would ever have learned otherwise. I can ask him, or any of the other people who were there with him direct questions about the experience, and have a fair chance of getting an answer.
Instagram I'm not that interested in. I have a few friends who enjoy photography and use it a lot more than other social media, so it's a way of seeing what they're up to.
eta: One of the major bonuses of Instagram, and Twitter probably too, is the chance of stumbling over something or someone really interesting just by chance. I was browsing Instagram one day, just looking at good photos, and via via via saw a photo of something that looked like a tame cheetah. It was, and his owner is Saudi, and he hunts with it. He also does big game hunting in poor areas of Africa, and gives away the meat to poor families. He posts under the name saudhunter. No matter how you may feel about hunting, this is a pretty interesting and unusual guy, and guaranteed someone I would never have heard of otherwise.
Crankin
05-16-2014, 03:05 AM
I guess I just want to read the news. No desire to interact.
I do discuss current events with my DH and a couple of friends, but that's it.
I am not sure why I don't enjoy looking at photos or listening to music. I can appreciate good art/music, but as far as photos go, I don't really see the artistic part of it. DH likes photography and always needs to have the newest camera, for reasons that seem silly to me. I know I sound like a weirdo, but I think it's just I can't sit long enough to really look at stuff.
shootingstar
05-16-2014, 05:17 AM
I enjoy looking at art and some people have impressive blogs of their own art. however for travel photography, after a few spectacular photos, I get bored..especially for photography the person doesn't bother to name the place that I'm looking at or explain abit about their photos.
Twitter is too short for my taste. ok to notify someone about something new on a web site or blog. But I don't pay much attention to twitter feeds.
Irulan
05-16-2014, 07:22 AM
eta: One of the major bonuses of Instagram, and Twitter probably too, is the chance of stumbling over something or someone really interesting just by chance.
haha, excellent excuse for surfing the web as I have ever heard. :)
This may amuse some of you so I'm spreading the word: a couple of days ago a friend of mine and I were griping about body fixation and pictures of perfect bodies everywhere in ads and the media, and the unperfect, "real body" movement too, actually. We pretty much agreed that when it came to people we actually looked up to and were interested in, how their bodies *looked* was probably the most uninteresting side of them. About as uninteresting as, say, our socks.
So we agreed to a very very small protest movement. On Instagram for a week or so we'll be posting really boring pictures, probably socks, tagged #****perfectbody and #bpotd (boring picture of the day). Feel free to join us :-D
(Pardon our language, we weren't thinking it would go beyond our Instagram followers).
eta: Yup, it got starred out. Well, it's the fourletter word that begins with f and ends with a k.
shootingstar
05-18-2014, 02:50 PM
:) Sounds like a great social media share, lph. Anti-perfect body, etc.
I'm always amazed how some bloggers don't know what to write about. Honest, a squirrel is boring to probably many North Americans, but our variety of squirrels doesn't exist world-wide. Even cycling socks is a real novelty in other social circles. Not that I want to spend more reading about sock experiences/reviews.
I actually don't read blogger cycling diaries. I prefer the blogger choose a topic and write it in a captivating way. Twitter doesn't offer this at all. Facebook?
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