"The phone system, at least to my knowledge, was never thought of as this separate thing that had it's own culture and a life of it's own. Ditto television. Phones connect one-to-one, not really as part of a community except in the sense that you could call anyone you knew the number for. Television was mostly one-way, so no community there." Paul Rumelhart<br> <br> Boy, I am going to have disagree with this statement. I think the telephone and TV have created very noticeable cultures and changes in our society. Telephones connected you with anyone else that had one. It changed the social fabric of society. Same with television. Ever see a Star Trek convention, there is a huge TV culture.<br> <br> I also think that television is two-way communication; it is just that people don't communicate back in the same manner. They communicate in mass by changing their behavior in response, usually, by buying a product or service they saw advertised.
<br> <br> Best,<br> <br> _DJA<br><br><b><i>Paul Rumelhart <godshatter@yahoo.com></i></b> wrote:<blockquote class="replbq" style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"> <meta content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content-Type"><title></title> I'd argue that the telephone and the television are the equivalent of the computer, which is always lower case, but there is no equivalent to the multi-headed hydra that is the Internet. The phone system, at least to my knowledge, was never thought of as this separate thing that had it's own culture and a life of it's own. Ditto television. Phones connect one-to-one, not really as part of a community except in the sense that you could call anyone you knew the number for. Television was mostly one-way, so no community there. The Internet is, in my mind, different. It's unique, and deserving of it's capital "I".
It's more like a place than an object.<br> <br> Paul<br> <br> Donovan Arnold wrote: <blockquote cite="mid20060711021007.67578.qmail@web38110.mail.mud.yahoo.com" type="cite">Chas,<br> <br> So if I use Yahoo Search instead of Googling, am I Yahooing?<br> <br> I agree that if telephone and television are lowercase, so should Internet. <br> <br> Best,<br> <br> _DJA<br> <br> <b><i>Chasuk <a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="mailto:chasuk@gmail.com"><chasuk@gmail.com></a></i></b> wrote: <blockquote class="replbq" style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"> On 7/10/06, Donovan Arnold <donovanjarnold2005 @yahoo.com=""> wrote:<br> <br> > OK, so does Googling mean, only using "Google"? Can you Google on Yahoo, or<br> > Google by Mr. Jeeves, or does Googling, strictly mean using Google?<br> <br> I wouldn't use the word "Googling" to refer to searches performed on<br> other
services, but I believe that the usage, if it persists, will<br> eventually encompass all competing services, if that hasn't already<br> started to happen.<br> <br> > And another question, can Internet be spelled with a little "i"? Some one<br> > needs to write an official rules of the Internet book.<br> <br> I find "internet" ugly, but <a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="http://www.wired.com">www.wired.com</a> specifies the small "i" in<br> their style book. Logically, I suppose that small "i" makes sense, as<br> we don't refer to to "Telephone" and "Television."<br> <br> -- <br> <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://emmagoldman.wordpress.com/">http://emmagoldman.wordpress.com/</a><br> <br> "Aren't people absurd! They never use the freedoms they do have, but<br> demand those they don't have; they have freedom of thought, they<br> demand freedom of speech." -- Søren Kierkegaard<br> <br>
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