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Is social networking taking the randomness out of life?
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I remember trying to avoid certain people on campus in college by guessing where they might be. Now you could probably check foursquare. I remember meeting up with people but not having a way to let them know if you couldn't make it. I remember not knowing who I would eat dinner with in the dining hall until I showed up. Cell phones have definitely changed all of that.

I'd never heard of foursquare before and now this is the secomd time I saw it referenced today.

I'd never heard of foursquare before and now this is the secomd time I saw it referenced today."
Welcome to 2010 I suppose.

Sometimes I get sad at how much the future generations will miss out on the simple things in life, like playing outdoors more and making forts and what-not instead of being constantly plugged in.
Then again, another 20, 30 years from now, we're probably all going to forget about life before technology, so eventually it will just become the norm and nobody will feel like they're missing out.
We'll all eventually do most everything by using social networking.




I'm an internet junkie, and don't know how to use a phone book anymore, haha. My mom always says she'll make a call to ask the restaurant for directions, and I keep trying to tell her that I can look it up on the net and she gives me one of those "you kids" looks.
When we were being assigned to dorms we could state a preference of what state/geographical location we wanted our roommate to be from, or not. I didn't state a preference because I kind of dug the random crapshoot of it all. Man did I loathe my roommate. F***ing hated that girl. At some point, maybe 6 months later, when friendships had formed, people did switcheroos within the floor of the dorm and I changed places with another girl and moved in with a girl I was sort of friends with. I ended up loathing her too.


I only spoke with her ONE TIME after the year we lived together.
*Also, she was 18, like me. I'm sure she's a lovely woman these days.


I took my family to L.A. for a baseball game. While there, we met up with my sister, then had dinner with my dad, stepmother & stepsister (and a couple of other people).
During dinner, my stepsister was texting a friend she had spotted on the other side of the restaurant. She had nothing to say to her nephew (sitting next to her) or to me or my wife.
We won't be hurrying back for another visit.

A husband and TWO roommates. Oh, and two cats and two dogs. It's a very full house.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/29/opi...