It states in the article researchers have found which times people are the happiest, and which times people are more likely to be sad:
"Mislove and Lehamann found that people are happiest on Sunday mornings and saddest on Thursday evenings. They also found the following mood pattern each day:
6:00-7:00 am: Happy Tweets
12:00-4:00 pm: Sad Tweets
Evening: Happy Tweets "
What do you do when you have to meet an Internet stalker IRL? Like somebody who likes all your Instagram photos, but you're not friends. You know that someone displaying appreciation for the works you put into public places doesn't constitute stalking, right?
The fact that Twitter is driving a social revolution within Saudi Arabia is astounding to me. It is a social network and because accounts are private citizens of the monarchy are able to broadcast their opinions without being persecuted for it, it's kind of like an open forum.
Twitter in america is treated like a luxury the same way that water or electricity is taken for granted. We use our social networking to broadcast the type of frape we just ordered even though those tools are used for people to come together against the government. This is an interesting aspect that is much more relevent in other countries than America.
This is a good article. It talks about how we are always on the internet. Is it a drug? This article seems to thing that we are getting too much technology and it is changing the way we act.
I can relate a lot of this article to myself, and my other friends that use technology as often as I do. I think because of technology, our daily lifestyle has been sped up dramatically.
I liked this article because it talks about how we wish for things to be as fast as the internet. As we begin to get addicted to the internet, we get addicted to the speed and its altering our brains.