Man I feel old

Marriage? Fatherhood? Mortgage? No sweat--I've handled these in stride. But it was a comment by my 15-year-old cousin the other day that made me start to feel old: "email is for old people."

I was born the day the first message was sent over Arpanet. I was born with email. I was in college when email was sweeping academia and entered the workforce just as email did. But now "email is for old people." Both email and I am getting old together.

The replacement, of course, is IM. My cousin informed me that she doesn't even know many of her friends' email addresses--and it doesn't matter because they hardly check it.

This is just one of many behavior patterns of gen y--see Tim Oren's post on Due Diligence that "The 13-24 demographic, a prime target for many marketers, now spends more time online than with the tube."

Email, which to some of us has become a vital resource that we need to live, like air or water, is not even used by some of the most digitally literate! Email isn't as essential as some--particular those who propose regulating speech to preserve it--would have us believe. There are other technologies already and I predict more to follow. This is why I wrote there is a silver lining to spam--it is forcing us to acknowledge the inherent weakness in the medium and prompting us to seek better methods of communication. I bet the future forms of communication, developed in part in an attempt to solve the spam problem, will be better in the end than before the spam problem ever existed.

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This page contains a single entry by Chris published on July 30, 2003 5:25 PM.

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Chris Alden

Christopher J. Alden is Chairman & CEO of Six Apart, Ltd., the world's largest blogging company. Six Apart acquired Rojo Networks, Inc., creator of an innovative RSS feed reading service, where Mr. Alden was co-founder and CEO. Before Rojo, he was CEO of Red Herring Communications, Inc., publisher of Red Herring magazine -- described by the Wall Street Journal as the "bible of Silicon Valley" - which he helped launch out of his house in 1993. Prior to that he founded Computer Guides, a consultancy, and taught computer studies at Crystal Springs Uplands school. Mr. Alden also has a background in real estate development and hotel management, having worked for Western Land Corporation and Woodside Hotels & Resorts.
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