pickwick33 said:Almond said:I log into FB when I check my email accounts, which is once or twice a day. I spend very little time on it compared to when I was younger.
When you were younger? How old are you, and how long has Facebook been around??? The invention still seems recent to me!
As for me...
to paraphrase the Otis Rush song, I can't quit it, but sometimes I feel I gotta put it down for awhile.
Myspace seemed fairly static, so it was easy to forget about it. But FB is continually active, addictive, and yes, it's a good way to keep up with people you don't see often, like ex-girlfriends or boyfriends you're still on good terms with. But it does mess with your productivity.
I joined FB in 2005, the summer I turned 18. 6 years is a long time, and it's helped me keep track of all the folks I've met in school, as well as distant relatives. It used to be open to only college students and you needed a .edu address to access it. I remember the day they added the option to upload photos. They used to have a tool that allowed you to fill in your classes, which then allowed you to see who you classmates were (which was excellent). I miss old FB and have def seen it evolve.
I used to spend a lot of time on it, but that was just procrastination. If you're spending that much time writing statuses about what your kid spilled this morn, that's your own mismanagement of time.
My teenage cousins document every moment of their lives via FB, so it's not going to lose popularity just yet. And Google seems "official" to me so I think it's going to be hard to get the kids to jump on G+ when they have FB, Twitter, YT, Tumblr, 4Chan, Stickam, etc. which are "fun n young." As for G+, I'm excited to try it, but for every person who's open to it, there will be another who will make a point to resist giving in to Big G's web monopoly. You'll prob get seated next to this person at Thanksgiving this year.
/theorizing