POD {Ò¿Ó} wrote:
> I
> care even less about blogs that are just about that person.
(I think this is the crux of the paragraph)
It just comes down to personal opinion, as these are friends (either real
or
Internet) and I am interested in them. In real life we interact with
people
and hear about their lives, whether you find it banal or super
interesting.
Blogs are just another way of conveying this, so not actually that
different
at all.
> It's people call out from all over the world, saying "Be my friend,
> lets do the stuff real friends do, but in a disconnected virtual way"
> But call me old fa****oned, but if I want a friend to tell me how crap
> their job is, I don't need a woman in Texas, I have friends here,
> that I can have a dynamic, interactive conversation with, and I can
> speak back to them.
But that's closed minded in another sense - aren't you interested in
people
around the world and how they perceive things? Along with Brits, and the
ubiquotous Yanks, I have blog friends from various other countries.
> It's like someone who is just ego centric..."I
> want to tell you about my life, but I don't want to hear about yours"
I'm not sure any blogs are like that. They're all about sharing with
others,
and equally being interested in others. You think a blogger doesn't read
what others are writing, and doesn't interact with them? The blogging
world
isn't like that.
> I see a world devoid of real social skills, as people just have
> relation****p on the internet.
Again this is based on the view that you can only have an Internet life or
real life. I have both, and get the best of both worlds.
--
StainlessSteelRat
http://www.stainlesssteelrat.net
"This is a fourteenth century Hungarian cross-bow, it killed the king,
and changed the history of Europe. If anything happens to my
apartment... I'll shove it up your ass." -- Antoine Laconte, Deuce
Bigalow: Male Gigolo


|