Distraction
I've discovered this little place called Facebook.
Maybe you've heard of it?
I sent you an invitation, right? I'm totally addicted, like completely. Just ask Adam. :)
Posted by: Kristin on January 7, 2008 12:25 PMActually, now that I think about it, I may not have invited you yet. I was planning to though!
Posted by: Kristin on January 7, 2008 12:27 PMWorse than the blog, that... Do you play scrabble? *grin*
Posted by: Megan on January 7, 2008 12:55 PMKris, it's the thought that counts. : )
Megan, let's get a game going. I do play, but I don't know how well. Feel free to kick my tush.
Posted by: RT on January 7, 2008 02:35 PMget out while you still can.
facebook is like communism
i have to agree with jared.
facebook is like communism.
Posted by: andrew on January 7, 2008 06:09 PMExplain.
Posted by: RT on January 7, 2008 07:56 PMI would say facebook is more a particular branch of communism--the KGB.
I look forward to this explanation.
Posted by: Lindsey on January 7, 2008 08:36 PMLindsey, now YOU'VE got to explain, too! Expound, expound.
Posted by: RT on January 7, 2008 08:40 PMEveryone's silly. Facebook is fun.
I want to play Scrabulous, too!
Posted by: Bethany on January 7, 2008 09:02 PMooooh, scrabble on facebook. that's kinda like going to the methadone clinic, isn't it? :)
Posted by: Jacinda on January 8, 2008 12:26 AMI say Facebook is like the KGB in that you find out all sorts of information about people without them knowing you've been looking through all their pictures. So everyone gets to be the KGB, just like there are no class levels to communism. The caveat is that you put the information out there in the first place, but considering that you can get updates of everyone, detailing what they wrote on other people's walls, what pictures they posted and if they broke up with their boyfriend, it is a little like a secret police newsfeed. I've heard rumors that Facebook sells your information to third-parties for the purpose of enticing ads and whatnot, in which case then Facebook, the platform is like the modern-day FSB.
In any case, you have the option of some hardcore privacy measures and Facebook is not nearly as public as MySpace. So rest easy. :) I think Facebook is great.
Posted by: Lindsey on January 8, 2008 12:47 AMWhat I like about Facebook so far is that I can network with old friends and new friends alike without much awkwardness. What I don't like about Facebook so far is that I feel kinda cheap after staying online far too long seeing who likes the same foods I do.
Posted by: RT on January 8, 2008 10:40 AMLindsey did a wonderful job at explaining.
But Facebook is also like communism in that everyone wastes a lot of time on it and theyre all treated equally. theres no point for anyone to do something with their life as long as they have facebook. no one is going to get ahead if they use facebook. once your in, you cant get out of facebook. kinda like communism.
oh and Stalin probably runs it. or the KGB.
Posted by: jared on January 8, 2008 02:21 PMIf Stalin "friends" me, should I accept?
Posted by: karen on January 9, 2008 08:22 AMwhen i first stopped by facebook and used my gmail contacts to see who was already on facebook i had a small panic attack. seeing about 40 or so friends already listed, including all sorts of weirdos that i forgot that i ever knew, i had this vision of me walking into a 10-year reunion at LCS and immediately heading for the nearest door. i guess that's it. i feel like i'm walking into a big room full of people i don't keep up with and then suddenly i'm expected to be social. yowsers...isn't the internet built on anonymity? i guess that's why it's social networking, huh?
Posted by: andrew on January 9, 2008 06:44 PMYou know Andrew, if I were going to my 10-year LCS reunion? I would be running, not walking, for the door. Maybe because there is Facebook and we can look at each other's pictures and profiles without actually talking, we don't have to have the reunion!
Posted by: Lindsey on January 9, 2008 09:56 PMSeriously, Facebook has made the concept of a reunion very anti-climactic. You already know who's married, who has kids, who got skinny/fat, what everyone's doing for a job, where they're living, what they look like now...what's the point in gathering to drink fruit punch and rehash what we already know about each other? :)
Posted by: Bethany on January 10, 2008 11:27 AM... unless you graduated before the 90's and you discover that there are only 14 people in your class on Facebook. ;)
Posted by: Jeremy on January 10, 2008 08:34 PMBefore the 90's? Were people, like, even alive then?
Posted by: Bethany on January 11, 2008 12:12 PMOuch.
from a 1981 graduate
I wish more of my friends who graduated before the 90's or in the early 90's were on facebook. :)
Posted by: sarah m. on January 12, 2008 06:51 PMI had a weird moment the other day when I realized that a person born in 1990 would be 18 this year. That just doesn't seem right.
Posted by: Bethany on January 14, 2008 11:27 AMAs a high school counselor, I often tell my students that I was in high school when they were born. I now have to tell my Freshmen and Sophomores that I was in COLLEGE when they were born.
I also have the wish that more of my high school friends were on facebook. I'm from the class of '91.
Posted by: Kristin on January 15, 2008 04:30 PM