Subscribe by Email

Your email:
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Youtube Google+ Inbound Marketing Blog

Inbound Marketing Agency Blog

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

Armageddon - The Death of Social Media

 

It was a dark and stormy night.

Chinese hackers were celebrating as they had succeeded in destroying Twitter and Facebook along with Google and a few other major social media hubs. Around the world people were huddling around their campfires wondering what to do next. Cell phone reception was spotty at best and online games were down. It was the perfect storm.

Armageddon - the death of social media

Now what? Nothing to read because Kindles, iPads and Google were all toast. We'd seen those same old tired DVD's a hundred times. Yeah, there were some real books around, but most of those were inherited from our parents and just looked good on the living room shelves. TV? Please. That had gone away years ago. Too many ads and not enough good programming. No interaction either. Radio? That might be interesting, but then talking heads and shock jocks get a little old after a while. Newspaper? Last time I checked we already knew that the world was going to Hell in a handbasket. By the way, what is a handbasket?

Wait a sec. There was something we used to do back in the day. Let's see... I'll start off a story with a sentence (as many characters as you want). Then you pick up the thread and continue. With 20 of us around the fire, we should have a pretty good tale going by the end. Then we could just talk for a while. Hey, that's not so bad. This is actually kinda cool.

Photo Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/elasticsoul/ / CC BY-SA 2.0



Comments

Said Sammy as he morosely stirred the ashes of the fire with his telescopic and now redundant presentations pointer. The group shifted occasionally as the lukewarm baked beans eaten earlier began to impact on their digestion.
Posted @ Thursday, February 11, 2010 7:05 AM by Chris
@Sammy, 
Old Guy yes. Tech is what I do 24/7, so no on the wishing part. This actually could happen, so don't get too comfortable... 
 
@Chris 
You got it. Let's see if somebody else picks up the thread. Thanks, John
Posted @ Thursday, February 11, 2010 8:06 AM by John McTigue
@Sammy  
 
I think John raises some very relevant issues. What would happen if we were forced to (re)communicate with one another - without a 140 character limit, or without an LOL, OMG, or TTYL?  
 
I visited some friends in Europe a few years back and was stunned by what I found. We actually had 3 group meals a day, every day, at their home... and talked. It was a wonderful experience and quiet frankly, an experience, I think, that is becoming less common in today's world.
Posted @ Thursday, February 11, 2010 8:22 AM by Roman Kniahynyckyj
What a calamity! I'd be stuck here in Mexico and I have to play tennis all day...8>)
Posted @ Thursday, February 11, 2010 8:34 AM by Bruce
Comments have been closed for this article.