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While the Iron is Hot
or not keeping up ?
We all come into this space with a different set of talents, and getting up to speed on everything, especially as things change so face from twitter to Jaiku to the next big thing, is frankly difficult. It means we are forced to make choices about how to spend our time and what gives you that value add.
I like twitter for keeping me up to date with my far flung friends. I like flickr for the same reason. But I still teach, have a podcast to get out, learn more about my new power book, manage the family, etc. Oh yea, and plan Podcamp Philly as well.
My workplace and friends are virtual in many ways- and in order to learn, you need to keep up, on some level, where the crowd is going and what they're doing. It's not all about being a sheep. It's about keeping abreast of a world that keeps changing by the keystroke, where time is the most precious commodity of all.
The difference between "keeping up with the Joneses" and the jump to Jaiku is noteworthy, though: Twitter is a conversation. It's a party. if the party leaves the room, the people at that party / having that conversation don't want to be left behind.
Funny observation: who was the tipping point for the Jaiku migration? Which of the top-level Twitterers said, "I'm moving to Jaiku," and everyone else suddenly realized they had to take it seriously?
Those are people with the power to shift markets. And I'm betting it was Brogan and / or Scoble.
Besides, the reason Leo Laporte started this exodus to Jaiku is pretty childish (to put it in a polite way) in my opinion. That alone makes me want to ignore Jaiku.
What I do find is that as a technically inclined person who is more often then not on these things from beta stages if I can, is that my relatively normal friends look at and use these sites very differently to me so while I am usually the first, and last to use a site within my social groups, I am guided by what sticks with other people, because I like keeping in touch with people easily, not using a tool for the sake of using it.
The trick is to stop worrying about what the cool kids are up to and focus on figuring out what actually works for me.
-Jon
With Second Life I went there because it was begining to sound like technical conferences were going to start happening there and given that I live in the conference/training wasteland of Colorado I thought I'd probably want to go and I would want to know how to use the tool before I was "needing" to be there. Twitter was a similar phenomenon for me - I wanted to understand what it was that was being talked about so I wanted to try it to understand it. Not so much "don't want to be left behind" but wanting understanding. I suppose it isn't unlike the cultural reference movies I watch. Much of what I do is about understanding things because I tend to be a communicator of ideas between groups. Is this most people's motivation?