Generational Musing II.

Extending Frank’s comments on the previous post.

1st- a poll:

Pew Internet & American Life Project: What Kind of Tech user Are You?

(Me: You are an Digital Collaborator. If you are a Digital Collaborator, you use information technology to work with and share your creations with others. You are enthusiastic about how ICTs help you connect with others and confident in how to manage digital devices and information. For you, the digital commons can be a camp, a lab, or a theater group – places to gather with others to develop something new.)




PIALP Report May 6, 2007A Typology of Information and Communication Technology Users

Summary of Findings
Overview
Americans sort into 10 distinct groups of users of information and communication technology.

Omnivores: 8% of American adults constitute the most active participants in the information society, consuming information goods and services at a high rate and using them as a platform for participation and self-expression.

The Connectors: 7% of the adult population surround themselves with technology and use it to connect with people and digital content. They get a lot out of their mobile devices and participate actively in online life.

Lackluster Veterans: 8% of American adults make up a group who are not at all passionate about their abundance of modern ICTs. Few like the intrusiveness their gadgets add to their lives and not many see ICTs adding to their personal productivity.

Productivity Enhancers: 8% of American adults happily get a lot of things done with information technology, both at home and at work.

Mobile Centrics: 10% of the general population are strongly attached to their cell phones and take advantage of a range of mobile applications.

Connected but Hassled: 9% of American adults fit into this group. They have invested in a lot of technology, but the connectivity is a hassle for them.

Inexperienced Experimenters: 8% of adults have less ICT on hand than others. They feel competent in dealing with technology, and might do more with it if they had more.

Light but Satisfied: 15% of adults have the basics of information technology, use it infrequently and it does not register as an important part of their lives.

Indifferents: 11% of adults have a fair amount of technology on hand, but it does not play a central role in their daily lives.

Off the Net: 15% of the population, mainly older Americans, is off the modern information network.




Internet Typology: The Mobile Difference Full Report

Wireless Connectivity Has Drawn Many Users More Deeply into Digital Life

by John B. Horrigan, Associate Director, Pew Internet & American Life Project
March 25, 2009



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Generational Musing I.

Sociological breakdown in the generational sense. Our current roster is, as far as I can tell, mostly drawn from the cohort of people 50-65 years of age. In 1996, you can backdate our ages to, roughly forty something. But in 1996, everybody on the net was, as it were, a kind of early adapter to the second wave of the internet. The first wave, we understood back then from the reports of Steve, Simon and the Winkler, the land of the BBS.

Running with the year 1996, a 16 year old back then is today 28-29. A 25 year old today, maybe somebody for whom Facebook and Twitter and cell phones and texting is second nature, was, in 1996, in sixth grade.

I’m going to split the difference and pose a third internet generation between the 55 year old and the thirty year old. Such a person is 40-50 years of age today, was 28-38 in 1996.

My rough hypothesis is that the mediating forms for net-oriented behavior show correlations with age groups clumped in some arbitrary (as far as division into ‘generations,’) and also structured way. From this I am going to offer a designation:

The current Netdynam roster is aged to come before both the blogging generation and the texting generation.

email discussion groups = Bob Dylan
blogging = Nirvana
Texting/Twitter = Feist
bonus cut:
Fleet Foxes

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