From technology to politics to video games; these are the random thoughts of a geek with too much time on his hands
Darn you kids... get off my lawn!
Published on December 8, 2006 By Zoomba In WinCustomize News

For some here, technologies such as Instant Messaging are a relatively recent novelty, the latest addition to a string of new technologies that have been steadily marching across our desks for over 20 years.  For others, the idea of a world without IM, without the World Wide Web, without cell phones is unimaginable.  A major digital divide is forming between current teens and their parents, with current teenagers not knowing a world before the Internet, before word processing and instant global communication.  Adults, for whom items like IM are a relatively new fad, often have trouble understanding teens dependence on technology, their surgical attachment to cell phones, and a compulsive need to check email every few minutes.

Someone who is 16 today was born in 1990, two years before the World Wide Web came about, but a full 6 years after the launch of the modern Personal Computer (the Apple Macintosh in 1984).  So for all of their life as far back as they can remember they've had the Internet, it's just something that's always been there. 

CNN talks about a recent poll conducted by the Associated Press regarding the difference in attitudes and Instant Messenger user between teens and adults.  The results?

  • Almost 3/4 of all adults who use IM still communicate via email more often.
  • Almost 3/4 of all teens use IM more than email to communicate.
  • Teens (30%) are almost twice as likely as adults (17%) to say they can't imagine life without IM

Of course, the story mentions that age doesn't mean you don't "get it" or aren't "hip to the things kids these days dig" and that many adults are embracing new technology and getting hooked.


Comments (Page 1)
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on Dec 08, 2006
What's funny for me is hearing younger folks complain about their Internet connection speed. "I'm only getting 5MB down and 1MB up! This sucks!" Egads.

I'm sure many of you will recall the days of 110 & 300 baud (6.95/hour on CompuServe), when having a 1200 or 2400 modem meant you were FILTHY RICH and could pay the 12.95/hour rate
on Dec 08, 2006
We had a party-line phone service and a wooden telephone box on the wall with a crank. All the neighbors were connected to a central operator who connected us when we turned the crank for our personal ring-style. We were assigned "one-long-and-two-short". If that sounded on the phone you picked it up, it was for you.
This is different.
on Dec 08, 2006

Eeee when I were a lad we only had a 17" B&W tv and we ate bread and dripping sandwiches.

The lucky few had technology in the form of a Hoover - the rest of us had to use a Bex Bissell...

Young 'uns today...sigh... The only thing they have to remember is in a few years time they are the ones who will be behind the times   

on Dec 08, 2006
Aye, y'buy 'em books, send 'em to school, teach 'em everything y'know...and they still don't get it ehh, whadda ya gonna do?
on Dec 09, 2006
Hey freezjeans I remember having a 2400 and we were cool because of it... I never really gave much thought that my nieces (now 10)have always heard of the internet and such... hum... when I was thier age playing 'pac man' on an atari was high tech.
on Dec 09, 2006
The only thing that counts is that you keep your mind open. For some reason when people get older they seem to shut that out. That's why younger people have an easier time with technology. Their minds are open. That's all ya gotta do! Dab-Namb-It!

on Dec 09, 2006
I'm not young enough to know everything...   
on Dec 09, 2006
I think this is just a little disengenious (spelling?) because kids have a lot more time on their hands and text messaging, when being interupted doesn't matter is fine. Us adults do not want to be interrupted by our phone beeping every 5 minutes and therefore e-mail (things that don't have to be right now) is a better venue of communication. Imagine trying to get work done as a project manager when you have 10 departments needing your time. You think text messaging is the right communication venue? Articles like these are "cute" but really don't put the substance of their numbers into real world situations. My take, the reason we have...

Almost 3/4 of all adults who use IM still communicate via email more often.
Almost 3/4 of all teens use IM more than email to communicate.

is not because we don't embrace the technology, it's because we use the technology when appropriate in our lives and do teens. Remember, our "lives" are much different.
on Dec 09, 2006
I think Rich has a point.. I don't usually us my IM given I wouldn't get much work done if I did. Actually, I use IM less than I use my IRC (which is nearly every morning and some evenings), I wonder what the #'s would be for IRC and/or if they count that as a 'form' of IM.
on Dec 09, 2006
I wonder what percent of adults think the internet is a series of tubes
on Dec 09, 2006
I'm not young enough to know everything...


And I'm too old to know nothing.....so with an open mind to all this new fangled technology, I'm prepared to learn how to use it to my better advantage. I don't IM a lot cos I'm always too busy on WC....and no bugger's gonna interrupt that!!

I never ever send text messages....don't own a phobile mone and never will. Emails and the house phone are my primary communication tools to the outside world....which is what's available to the outside world if it wants to talk with me. And if people don't like it/can't come to my door, then they obviously didn't wanna talk to me that badly and can bugger off.
on Dec 10, 2006
we are all just tubes, putting things in at one end, and expelling them from the other
on Dec 11, 2006
we are all just tubes, putting things in at one end, and expelling them from the other


Trust you to go off topic with a trip down memory lane regarding your mischievous pea shooter days at school.....and when you put 'things in one end' of people's downpipes so the rain got expelled at the wrong end and overflowed their gutters.

Now for my own on/off topic comment/thought. Given that the abacus was the IN school calculator when I was a lad, and record players still had wind up handles on the side, and I could see how those things worked, I often find modern technology does not follow the same kind of logic. For example, the start button on my old record player made the record play, but on computers you gotta push the start button to stop/turn it off.

Okay, that's a simplistic way of putting it, but in so many modern appliances, particularly in computing, the buttons don't always behave as described/named and do not always do/perform as expected....and it can be quite a steep learning curve when adapting from mechanical devices that followed the laws of physics to electronic devices whose characterisics can seem quite illogical as they work within different perameters and use descriptions/terms that had alternative meanings 30 years or so ago....then there's all these new fangled words you'd never have found in a dictionary just 10 -20 years ago.

I suppose that's the difference between the younger and older generations: the young uns are born with it, are taught it at school, use it for recreation and work, while us older folk are still identifying with the steam engine, push mowers and the pick and shovel.
on Dec 11, 2006

I think this is just a little disengenious (spelling?)

'disingenuous' .... Spell checker

I'm 52...and have embraced just about all forms of 'modern trickery', though still managed to have NEVER sent a text message...and my life is no poorer for it.

Almost 3/4 of all adults who use IM still communicate via email more often.
Almost 3/4 of all teens use IM more than email to communicate.
Teens (30%) are almost twice as likely as adults (17%) to say they can't imagine life without IM

All sounds a little 'twee'....eg 'Almost 3/4 of all adults who use IM still communicate via email more often - than what?....a fish?....

How about....

30% of adults are clever enough to see the vague and rash generalizations within the typical vox-pop.....

on Dec 11, 2006
It would seem that it is symptom of basic technological evolution.

For the people who were teenagers before the birth of the cell phone and Internet:

IM = Land-line phone
E-mail = Postal mail

For the people who are teenagers after the birth of the cell phone and Internet:

Land-line phone = IM
Postal mail = E-mail

I think I now understand why society as a whole seems to be in a rush to complete the daily projects. We have allowed the electronic information system to affect our sense of timing.

I am not sure that is such a good thing.   
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