
I have always been someone who embraces new technology. I use the
SatNav on my phone, I own more than one MP3 player (but not an
iPod), I have a good AV system at home, love the
internet, own more than one computer, I can network my music around my home (using
ethernet cabling which is installed under the floor of my house), I have owned a Spectrum, a Commodore 64, Atari ST, Commodore Amiga,
NES,
SNES,
GameCube,
DS,
Wii,
Xbox and
Xbox 360. Oh, and I also had a first generation
Gameboy. Yes, in general I'd make the point that I am tech savvy and like gadgets and
gizmos.
So why do I not see the point in Twitter ?
It seems that
bloggers are mad about Twitter but as far as I can tell from people's feeds on their blogs all Twitter tells me about is where they have been, what they have done, who they spoke to and, in general, I find these things about as interesting as paint drying.
I am sure there are some interesting feeds from some celebrities IF you have the time and inclination to follow them. However, I am at a loss as to why following an MP or a political blogger would be in any way interesting or worthy of my valuable time. And time is the most important aspect here.
For many years I have known Norman Lamb well. Since long before he was MP for North Norfolk I have been slightly in awe of the effort he puts in to North Norfolk and it has been a pleasure to know him. But do I want to follow him on Twitter ? Do I want to know who he has met, where he has been, which debate he engages in ? No. Why ? Because if I wanted to know I would call him or look it up on the
internet. Now if I am not that interested in an interesting person in a high profile job who is a friend of mine, why should I have the time to follow someone else who does not meet any of those criteria ?
I have a life, quite a busy one, which involves my family, working, some entertainment (if I can fit this in) and generally trying to fit everything in to 17 hours a day and then get 7 hours sleep. As it is I find it hard to fit in the time to blog regularly.
The very fact that people spare the time to read my blog in the first place is something that amazes me, but at least, I hope, that because I am writing in some depth those who read this will find out more about me views and opinions as I seek to explain them. But could this happen on Twitter where you are limited to writing no more than a single sentence ? I think not.
So I simply don't get Twitter because I have enough to do in 24 hours without spending/wasting my time reading about the triviality of
someone's bowel movements are who they bumped in to. For me Twitter is this year's
Facebook, and whilst I can understand how the networking elements of
Facebook make sense, even if
Facebook itself serves no real purpose, then I fail to see how my life will be enriched or made anything other than trivial by learning about the trivialities of someone
else's life.