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	<title>Comments on: Social media is social</title>
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	<link>http://blog.ninastoessinger.com/2013/06/social-media-is-social/</link>
	<description>notes on type, design, life &#38; everything</description>
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		<title>By: Robert Kersbergen</title>
		<link>http://blog.ninastoessinger.com/2013/06/social-media-is-social/#comment-2</link>
		<dc:creator>Robert Kersbergen</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Jun 2013 18:00:38 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Hi Nina, after having read your post and that of Ralf, I wonder if your opinion would be the same if you have 10,000 followers and as many critics and trolls as he apparently had to deal with. In the end, like you say, it is a personal choice whether or not you feel comfortable investing so much time in communication. And it&#039;s not as if Ralf will no longer learn because he&#039;s not on Twitter, he feels that Twitter just isn&#039;t the right medium for serious discussions. That might mean he will not reach those who do embrace Twitter but I reckon that people who are seriously interested in getting in touch with him, will find the fora he is active on.

So, yes, publishing is no longer an act of one-way communication but the start of a discussion or conversation. But there are so many ways to communicate these days that some choices have to be made, i.e. limit yourself to prevent information overload, until they find a way to hook us up directly into the &#039;net and we can all become Borg and know everything, together.

Thanks for posting the blog, food for thought and it&#039;s been ages since I last responded to a blog post; I feel so old-school ;-).]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Nina, after having read your post and that of Ralf, I wonder if your opinion would be the same if you have 10,000 followers and as many critics and trolls as he apparently had to deal with. In the end, like you say, it is a personal choice whether or not you feel comfortable investing so much time in communication. And it&#8217;s not as if Ralf will no longer learn because he&#8217;s not on Twitter, he feels that Twitter just isn&#8217;t the right medium for serious discussions. That might mean he will not reach those who do embrace Twitter but I reckon that people who are seriously interested in getting in touch with him, will find the fora he is active on.</p>
<p>So, yes, publishing is no longer an act of one-way communication but the start of a discussion or conversation. But there are so many ways to communicate these days that some choices have to be made, i.e. limit yourself to prevent information overload, until they find a way to hook us up directly into the &#8216;net and we can all become Borg and know everything, together.</p>
<p>Thanks for posting the blog, food for thought and it&#8217;s been ages since I last responded to a blog post; I feel so old-school ;-).</p>
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