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This is your Pownce on Twitter

1 Dec

How my dashboard will look on Dec. 15

How my Ping.fm dashboard will look on Dec. 15

A lot of people shot off tweets today in response to the announcement that Pownce will be shutting down on Dec. 15. I have a Pownce account, but I don’t know a single person who’s on it. That hasn’t stopped me from posting to it, though, since I use Ping.fm to post my updates.

In fact, Pownce is one of seven accounts I routinely post to but rarely, if ever, check out. Sometimes I wonder why I have an account on Rejaw (which I have no opinion on, really) or on Plurk (which I actually dislike) when Twitter is the only one that matters to me. Those sites make me feel like the social outcast in school’s who’s sitting alone at lunch — I mean, I look around and can’t get anyone to talk to me.

So why do I bother setting up accounts I never visit? I guess for a couple of reasons — the main one being curiosity. It’s the reporter in me. The only way to see how these sites work is to get inside, so when I read about YourAre in some random article I come across, I figure why not check it out.

The other reason is because I figure no one really knows which service will end up winning out in the long run. It’s all about Twitter these days — you know Twitter’s gone totally mainstream when The New York Times writes about it) — but I feel as if every few weeks there’s yet another story about Twitter’s business model (usually, it’s about its lack of one).

I’ve decided to try to pay off my all my loans rather than contribute to a 401(k) at work, but back when I used to put money in, I took a similar tact — just picked a little bit of everything. I figured I would never cash in, but I also wouldn’t ever lose it all. (Clearly, I need help on the investment front. But if I had been good about money in the front place, I would never have decided to become a journalist.)

At least social networks are free to join (at least they are now) — and the only thing you have to contribute are words.

Logged off, locked out

24 Nov
Did I really survive 48 hours without the Interneet?

How did I survive 48 hours without the Internet?

When this weekend started, I celebrated by logging out of all my accounts — Gmail, Twitter, Ping.fm, Facebook, FriendFeed. I turned off my personal cell and my work BlackBerry and noted the time: 8:01 p.m.  I didn’t think I could make it 48 hours without tweets and text messages, but I liked the idea of being liberated from it all, no matter how brief.

The second after I had shut it all down, my first impulse was to send a tweet about how energized I was at starting this experiment.

Yeah. This was going to be a long 48 hours.

Getting through the first evening turned out to be surprisingly easy, and I started to feel that stillness I was looking for. But on Saturday, stillness turned to immobility — the list of things I couldn’t do got longer and longer.

Couldn’t go online to browse for ideas for my youngest sister’s birthday. Couldn’t tweet about the Mediterranean orzo omelet I had whipped up. Couldn’t post a LinkedIn recommendation for a former colleague. Couldn’t look up the lyrics to the Blur song I was listening to. Couldn’t even look up a word, since I don’t have a hard copy of a dictionary at home. Couldn’t make a phone call to set up a hair appointment, since I don’t have a landline.

Like a New Yorker who’s had it with the city, I told myself I had to get away for the weekend. But it didn’t take long to realize how much I missed my little space in this Web 2.0 world — even if it means that my BlackBerry constantly vibrates from incoming work-related e-mails. Logging on and powering up at 8:01 this evening felt like turning the key and flipping on the light — it’s good to be home.

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