Social media etiquette

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Image via CrunchBase

I like antisocial media. I use it quite a lot – between Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Google Plus I probably get into double digits when it comes to the number of times I check social media sites. And I probably enjoy reading people’s posts, seeing their photos, laughing at videos and thinking about blog posts far more than I let on, because I’m really not very good at publicly ‘liking’ them.

But that’s what annoys me most about other people! I take the time to write a witty, clever observation in 140 characters, and how many retweets/favourites/likes/thumbs up do I get? None! This leads me to two potential conclusions:

  1. It wasn’t that witty or clever; people just didn’t like it that much.
  2. People did like it, but it would have taken a moment to have pressed like or whatever, so they didn’t.

Now, ignoring the fact that I’m almost certainly not as witty or clever as I think I am, I’m going to lean towards the second conclusion because that’s how I use social media; Facebook and everything else is all about me! It’s not about me liking other people’s work, it’s about me putting a fun picture up there, and everyone else thinking, ‘Wow, Sam’s definitely both clever and witty.’

I’m part of an online community of bloggers, and there’s a reasonable proportion of the community who log on, post a link to their blog, and don’t even bother to look at other people’s stuff (as far as anyone can tell). They’re known as post-and-runners, and they’re annoying.

I wonder, would social media be a nicer place if we all publicly liked each other more?

This may be a tenuous verse to bring in, but I reckon it fits:

By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another. (John 13:35)

Do you suffer from FOMO?

A protester holding a placard in Tahrir Square...

A protester holding a placard in Tahrir Square referring to Facebook and Twitter, acknowledging the role played by social media during the 2011 Egyptian Revolution. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The way that social media has taken over everything has led to a brand new disease: Fear Of Missing Out.

Seriously. You go on holiday from the internet for a couple of weeks, then come back and realise that you’ve missed out on hundreds, nay, thousands of updates on your Facebook timeline, Twitter feed, RSS reader and everything else – how much useful and vital information have you missed out on?!

So what do you do? Not go on holiday from the internet is what! Go on holiday from everything else, but still keep up-to-date with blogs and Facebook. You’re not an idiot.

But just in case you’re afraid that you might be, there’s a useful little article with the solution to FOMO.

Tweeting well

English: Tweeting bird, derived from the initi...

Image via Wikipedia

Ray Ortlund Jr. is one of my favourite bloggers, and he was recently interviewed over at Desiring God about how to define a successful tweet.

Here are his criteria:

A failed tweet displays Self.

A successful tweet displays Christ.

Who cares about the details of my daily life? I hardly care myself.

But I think we can all agree on this: we must decrease, but he must increase.

What I aim at in using the media is another person being able to click in and click out quickly, with maximum benefit to their souls.

Everyone is so busy. But everyone matters.

I want to ask little of them, and add much to them.

I am there to serve, not to demand or impress, by giving them more of Jesus.

I like them.

Becoming me

Last week I was surprised to be contacted by a guy who was basically my best friend when I was 10. In a surprise twist, it wasn’t through Facebook!

Anyway, I moved house when I was 11 but he didn’t, so he stayed in touch with the people I went to school with, and when I found him on Facebook I was abl

Profile shown on Thefacebook in 2005

Image via Wikipedia

e to dig through his friends and see a whole bunch of my old friendship group – great news!

What’s really interesting is that I can look at all their pictures and I see two people: them now, but mostly them as a 10 year-old. And, of course, they probably do the same when they look at me. The thing is, I don’t think I’d get on very well with my 10 year-old self – he was a bit of an idiot to be honest.

It sort of struck me that I never stopped being me, it’s just that ‘me’ changed over the last couple of decades.

But God doesn’t change. As I get older, I’ll change my hairstyle and my attitude, but God doesn’t change a single thing. That’s good news by the way.

Search terms

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Image via Wikipedia

I’d always been told that one of the best features of a blog hosted at WordPress is the stats that are available. I’d never really dug into them, but they’re actually pretty cool.

This interested me, but here are the top ten search terms that have led people to this blog (not including searches for my name – misspellings of that are pretty much every other entry)…I wonder how many people found what they were searching for?

  1. Takkiya
  2. Oxo laughing stock
  3. Angela Kemm
  4. Todd Bentley divorce
  5. Richard Dawkins
  6. Mark Stibbe Todd Bentley
  7. Humorous thoughts
  8. How to dress like a tory
  9. Aaron Rodgers captains photos
  10. manupmen