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Subject: [IP] Instant Messaging for Introverts
________________________________________ From: Richard Forno [rforno@infowarrior.org] Sent: Wednesday, April 30, 2008 9:47 PM To: Infowarrior List Cc: David Farber Subject: Instant Messaging for Introverts Opinion | 04 Apr 2008 | Instant Messaging for Introverts by Joe Kissell http://db.tidbits.com/article/9544 This fellow nicely sums up nearly my exact sentiment on Instant Messaging. I thought I was the only one who felt this way!!! More specifically, while I'm not as 100% black-and-white as he writes (ie, I don't mind chatting around when working if I'm so inclined every now and then) this article extract pretty much is my take on the IM thing..... < - > > Unlike many people, when I'm in front of my computer, I'm working, which means > I'm concentrating on something. I'm writing an article, or a book, or an email > message, trying to come up with exactly the right way to phrase some sentence > or express a certain point. Or I'm programming, trying to solve some logic > problem. Or I'm reading an article. Whatever the activity, it's something to > which I am predisposed to devote my entire attention. If the phone rings, or > my wife asks me a question, or an iCal alarm goes off, it breaks my > concentration in a way that's frustrating to recover from. I lose my mental > place, and it takes me a long time to get back into that same train of thought > and finish whatever I was working on. I'm not saying I need to write an entire > book without any interruptions, but when my mind is actively juggling > information, I need to complete that particular thought (or block of code, or > paragraph) before moving on to something else. > > This is why I love email as a mode of communication. I get many dozens of > messages every day, but I can answer them whenever I want. I don't have to > look at them right in the middle of this paragraph; I can wait five or ten > minutes - it doesn't matter (though in practice, I usually answer email very > quickly). Voicemail can make handling phone calls similarly convenient. But > instant messaging isn't like that. If my status shows that I'm online, then > people expect an immediate response, and even though I could choose not to > respond, I'd still have the blinking, bouncing, or beeping notification > interrupting my train of thought - it isn't an improvement for me. > > So in terms of IM status, I never consider myself "available" in the sense of > "interruptible." Ever. There is no time of any day, under any circumstances, > when I think to myself, "I really don't mind being interrupted now." If I'm > not at my computer, then most likely a phone call or a knock at the door won't > seem like an interruption. But if I am at my computer, I'm concentrating, > which means I'm not "available" - I do mind being interrupted. And if my > status shows that I'm unavailable, as it invariably does when I'm logged into > iChat, most people will refrain from trying to start a conversation - meaning > I might as well be entirely offline. < - > -------------------------------------------
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