
"extraordinary things... revel in your time"
I've never met JF Ponce, but he is now my 5,000 friend on Facebook.

From what I'm told 5,000 is the limit, but I haven't tried to add another friend for fear of the fact that 5,000 is not the actual limit and I shall spend the rest of my days adding friends on Facebook for three minutes a day or a 1,000 minutes a year. A day of my life a year gone to Facebook.
Thinking about that makes me wonder what we've all lost or gained with this time adding friends online. What we've lost is clear: time. If that's the case, then why do I feel like we've gain so much time?
Some examples of things we've gained thanks to the social graph:
- We can post something and put it in front of dozens, hundreds, even thousands of people for their feedback.
- We can ask a question and get instant advice without ever picking up the phone or going out for a drink.
- We can amuse the heck out of each other and get a laugh any time of the day.
- We are never alone (if we don't want to be).
- We are never more than a search and a message away from finding that someone we knew back when.
- We know many more people on a much deeper level than we were capable of doing before the social graph
Then again, something about it feels synthetic doesn't it?

Pris: Must get lonely here, J.F.
J.F. Sebastian: Not really. I *make* friends.... It's a hobby.
Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | CommentsJ.F. Sebastian: Not really. I *make* friends.... It's a hobby.


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