Is Social Media Comparable To The Industrial Revolution? | Microgeist - 4 views
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That would really have to depend on what you consider to be a revolution. In many industries, social media won’t leave much of a mark. For those folks, the phenomenon will be more of an idle curiosity. Think a bit more though and, in the U.S. at least social network functionality is everywhere.
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The death of anonyminity. Without care, internet transactions and communications can be captured and preserved forever. The saving grace? That no one really cares what you had for lunch
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Biggest shift since industrial revolution. The author makes a case for this and does so with enough detail that giving the notion some consideration seems feasible. Is this claim true? That would really have to depend on what you consider to be a revolution. In many industries, social media won’t leave much of a mark. For those folks, the phenomenon will be more of an idle curiosity. Think a bit more though and, in the U.S. at least social network functionality is everywhere.
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Biggest shift since industrial revolution. The author makes a case for this and does so with enough detail that giving the notion some consideration seems feasible. Is this claim true? That would really have to depend on what you consider to be a revolution. In many industries, social media won’t leave much of a mark. For those folks, the phenomenon will be more of an idle curiosity. Think a bit more though and, in the U.S. at least social network functionality is everywhere.
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Biggest shift since industrial revolution. The author makes a case for this and does so with enough detail that giving the notion some consideration seems feasible. Is this claim true? That would really have to depend on what you consider to be a revolution. In many industries, social media won’t leave much of a mark. For those folks, the phenomenon will be more of an idle curiosity. Think a bit more though and, in the U.S. at least social network functionality is everywhere.
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Biggest shift since industrial revolution. The author makes a case for this and does so with enough detail that giving the notion some consideration seems feasible. Is this claim true? That would really have to depend on what you consider to be a revolution. In many industries, social media won’t leave much of a mark. For those folks, the phenomenon will be more of an idle curiosity. Think a bit more though and, in the U.S. at least social network functionality is ever
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Biggest shift since industrial revolution. The author makes a case for this and does so with enough detail that giving the notion some consideration seems feasible. Is this claim true? That would really have to depend on what you consider to be a revolution. In many industries, social media won’t leave much of a mark. For those folks, the phenomenon will be more of an idle curiosity. Think a bit more though and, in the U.S. at least social network functionality is everywhere.
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Biggest shift since industrial revolution. The author makes a case for this and does so with enough detail that giving the notion some consideration seems feasible. Is this claim true? That would really have to depend on what you consider to be a revolution. In many industries, social media won’t leave much of a mark. For those folks, the phenomenon will be more of an idle curiosity. Think a bit more though and, in the U.S. at least social network functionality is everywhere.
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Biggest shift since industrial revolution. The author makes a case for this and does so with enough detail that giving the notion some consideration seems feasible. Is this claim true? That would really have to depend on what you consider to be a revolution. In many industries, social media won’t leave much of a mark. For those folks, the phenomenon will be more of an idle curiosity. Think a bit more though and, in the U.S. at least social network functionality is everywhere.
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Biggest shift since industrial revolution. The author makes a case for this and does so with enough detail that giving the notion some consideration seems feasible. Is this claim true? That would really have to depend on what you consider to be a revolution. In many industries, social media won’t leave much of a mark. For those folks, the phenomenon will be more of an idle curiosity. Think a bit more though and, in the U.S. at least social network functionality is everywhere.