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Communications The Internet

Instant Messaging For Introverts 311

adamengst tips an article up on TidBITS that explores the persistent reluctance of many nerds to embrace fully new communications media such as IM and Twitter. In this thoughtful article Joe Kissell explores, from the inside, the mind of the introvert and how this personality style often struggles with new "always-on" media. The result is a sometimes exasperated incomprehension on the part of the more extroverted. Well worth a read.
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Instant Messaging For Introverts

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  • by Mipoti Gusundar ( 1028156 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:09AM (#22987182) Journal
    I would be getting frist post, bud saddley I am being too shy.
  • by lottameez ( 816335 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:10AM (#22987184)
    was about the most boring thing I've ever read. I couldn't bring myself to read the second half; perhaps it was more interesting.

    NEWSFLASH! Some people don't like IM! Film at 11. *yawn*. Bring on the pink ponies.
    • Not too well written, I agree; but thats the first time I've read something that kinda explains to me my own feelings about IM.
      I've currently got problems with it. I leave Skype on full time these days for Biz purposes, and my GF wants to pop up a chat window every 10 freaking minutes, breaking my concentration, effectively ending my ability to do any meaningful work; I end up just surfing instead of trying to do anything, because I know I'm just going to get interrupted anyway.
      • The solution to your problem is have multiple accounts, one for business, one for your friends, and one for dirty cyber with 19yo whores (30yo fat virgin nerd guys doing a girly voice) you met in a chatroom.
      • by kv9 ( 697238 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:57AM (#22987538) Homepage

        I leave Skype on full time these days for Biz purposes, and my GF wants to pop up a chat window every 10 freaking minutes, breaking my concentration
        shouldn't you be telling her this? also, real nerds use IRC.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by mdwh2 ( 535323 )
        Indeed - the problem isn't "Always on", after all I'm fine with my mobile or my landline being always on. The problem is that with IM, it's become "Always on, and always advertising me as on". And so as soon as you come online, however many 10s or 100s of people on your list think that means you're up for making random small talk.

        I'd rather IM was treated like a phone - call me if you want to talk about something, but it doesn't mean I'm always up for idle chit chat.
        • by Dan541 ( 1032000 )
          That's why I prefer email over IM but some people don't check their mail.

          Plus with IM if the network goes down your offline with email the Internet has to go down for it to become unoperational so I'd consider email to be more redundant.

          as for IM my favorite is Skype (or IRC for public chatting) but the only one I use is MSN because thats just what the people I know are using.
        • by Dragonslicer ( 991472 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @09:06AM (#22988188)

          The problem is that with IM, it's become "Always on, and always advertising me as on". And so as soon as you come online, however many 10s or 100s of people on your list think that means you're up for making random small talk.
          That's what away messages and invisible mode are for.
      • by R2.0 ( 532027 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @08:32AM (#22987836)
        I carpool with a guy that is going through an amicable divorce that is turning messier by the day. She communicate a LOT by text message - not "Pick up some milk" but "I think we should go to counseling" and "I hate you and I never want to talk to you again". Texting has given her the ability to vomit out all her surface thoughts without the burden of reflection or instant feedback from a face to face conversation. Lovely.
        • by good soldier svejk ( 571730 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @09:09AM (#22988228)
          My wife and I have had quite the opposite experience. IM allows us to calmly discuss the most sensitive topics. Writing down your response forces a moments reflection and the medium strips any unwanted or imagined inflection. However, unlike email, there is no long delay allowing you to map your own broken subtext onto the message and stew over it. Misunderstandings are easy to resolve with a simple question.
      • by rbanffy ( 584143 )
        I had to explain to my wife (back when she was my GF) that, while I am working, I am in "autistic mode" and should never, ever be interrupted because it takes a long time to put one's brain in that mode (unless, of course, you are really autistic, but this is beyond the scope of this post).

        That's why I turn Skype, Pidgin and Evolution off for most of the time. As for disruptions, Evolution was driving me crazy - I don't care some IMAP server could not be pinged - just get the f* e-mail. It seems the next re
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Ephemeriis ( 315124 )

        I leave Skype on full time these days for Biz purposes, and my GF wants to pop up a chat window every 10 freaking minutes, breaking my concentration, effectively ending my ability to do any meaningful work; I end up just surfing instead of trying to do anything, because I know I'm just going to get interrupted anyway.

        For me it's ICQ, and almost entirely so my wife can get in touch with me if she needs to... I've managed to keep most of my business contacts off IM and on email instead... But I do agree with the distraction issues.

        I don't like IM because it interrupts what I'm doing. The icon blinks, or the window pops up, and I know that someone is on the other end right now, waiting for a response from me. It feels rude to just ignore the message, I have to read it and respond. And that interrupts whatever it was

    • "Socially awkward" is a description that plagues lots of people, even those that are not "nerds". Nerds are more likely to try and explain their shortcomings as some sort of mark of genius. "We think differently!" Everyone gets nervous, but often, only those that are inwardly focused to a fault and perhaps a touch narcissistic get bothered by it.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:10AM (#22987186)
    If, as wacky futurists like Ray Kurzweil in his The Singularity is Near [amazon.com] human beings will increasingly maintain portions of their conscious in computer networks, is there even a place for introversion in the future? Eventually once all of mankind is networked, it'll be harder and hard to tune out.
    • by montyzooooma ( 853414 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:27AM (#22987288)
      The reverse may be true. While the majority of the population is amusing themselves online the introverts will be off in their corners reading their books without fear of interruption.
      • Until all of the cool kids get on IM and decide to give the introverts a swirly.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by rtb61 ( 674572 )
          Perhaps you should have read the article, not all introverts are shy or passive but can be just as effectively aggressive as extroverts, but just prefer not to be that way. It is like the difference between computer geeks and computer nerds, just think of geeks as the ones quite willing to fight back.

          Instant messaging for introverts is pointless as it takes away any sense of solitude. I used to loathe being a slave to the land line at work and actively and successfully fought off getting a mobile phone (d

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by digitig ( 1056110 )

      If, as wacky futurists like Ray Kurzweil in his The Singularity is Near [amazon.com] human beings will increasingly maintain portions of their conscious in computer networks, is there even a place for introversion in the future? Eventually once all of mankind is networked, it'll be harder and hard to tune out.

      If things were headed that way then negative feedback would prevent it. It's introverts who are tuned out who actually write the code, work out the science, design the technology to give us things like that. If it became hard for introverts to tune out, the enabling technological innovations would dry up.

  • by MassiveForces ( 991813 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:11AM (#22987196)
    Twitter and things like that add useless noise to the Web 2.0. Who's sick of some idiot twittering what they're up to all the time and drowning out all the more thoughtful status updates on Facebook? I don't think even extroverts want to know what everyone is thinking or doing all the time, for fear of realizing how dilute their thoughts really are... it's like those really noiesy couples that talk all the time, but if you ever listen in they're talking about jack all and it deteriorates into whining.

    Actually maybe I shouldn't have been so extroverted as to post this. Alright everyone, let's not post at all in protest of extroversion...
    • The term "Web 2.0" adds useless noise to developers that work with html, xml, java, and other technologies. I must have missed Web 1.5, Web 1.99a, and Web 2.0 (beta).
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      drowning out all the more thoughtful status updates on Facebook?

      I nearly modded +1 funny for that, but I had to clean the coffee off my keyboard first.

    • by necro81 ( 917438 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @08:37AM (#22987886) Journal

      thoughtful...Facebook
      incongruous?
  • by iBod ( 534920 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:13AM (#22987208)
    Anyone who wants or needs to concentrate suffers from the constant barrage of interruptions from this 'always on' technology.

    IM, Cellphones, SMS etc. It seems to be expected now that everyone should be instantly contactable, at any time, for the most trivial of communications.

    I'm not an introvert, but prefer to be uninterrupted unless it's something really important.

    I annoy people by not playing the game, by turning off my cellphone, not running an IM client (unless I want to specifically talk to someone), only checking my email twice a day etc.

    The constant jabbering and twittering that surrounds us now really pisses me off. QUIET please!
    • by v1 ( 525388 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:25AM (#22987282) Homepage Journal
      Not entirely on topic but people need to learn to live without their cell phones. A few people I know, anywhere they go, anything they're doing, their phone is ringing. usually several times. And they always have to answer it. We can be playing a multiplayer game and they'll just stop playing to answer the phone, sometimes costs us the game.

      No amount of heckling them about their constantly having to answer the phone seems to help.

      "I have to answer it. What if it's an important call? What if my wife just got in a car accident or something?" You can't reason with them.
      • by iBod ( 534920 )
        Agree.

        My wife is a fine example. Every call gets answered, every ping! of an incoming SMS gets her immediate attention.

        About the only time she doesn't react to it is when she's driving or asleep.

        My cellphone, on the other hand is an 'always off' technology.
      • by Ed Avis ( 5917 ) <ed@membled.com> on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:33AM (#22987330) Homepage
        How thoughtless of them! What could possibly be more important than a multiplayer online game?
        • by artg ( 24127 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @08:11AM (#22987646)
          More to the point : what could possibly be more important than paying attention to the people you're with ?
          And what could possibly be more rude than to temporarily ignore them to accept an interruption ?
          • by Ephemeriis ( 315124 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @08:55AM (#22988092)

            More to the point : what could possibly be more important than paying attention to the people you're with ?
            And what could possibly be more rude than to temporarily ignore them to accept an interruption ?
            Exactly. If I'm going out for dinner/drinks/whatever with a bunch of friends or family it is for the purpose of spending time with them. We're supposed to chat, joke, communicate, catch up on things. If someone spends the entire time on their cell phone talking with someone else, why did they bother to show up?

            My wife and I recently went to the movies... Someone, seated a couple rows ahead of us, spent the entire movie texting someone. All through the movie you could see the glow of their cell phone's screen, and their thumbs bouncing around on the keypad. They obviously weren't paying any attention to the movie. They also had another person with them, who appeared to actually be watching the movie. What are they going to talk about afterwards?

            "What did you think about the movie? Wasn't it amazing when that guy did that thing" "Oh, I didn't notice, I was too busy texting..."

          • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

            by The Fun Guy ( 21791 )
            Sorry, what? Listen, can I get back to you? My other phone is ringing.
        • "What could possibly be more important than a multiplayer online game?"

          Nothing, but thats not the point.

          Look at it this way. An email is like saying "Hey, I have something I want to tell you, please reply at your convenience".

          A phone call is like saying "Hey, I have something to say, and i expect you to drop everything you are doing in order to listen."

          If some fellow humans decide to honor you with their presence during a game, movie, or eating out, you could at least have the courtesy to turn off
      • by morgan_greywolf ( 835522 ) * on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:39AM (#22987372) Homepage Journal

        What if it's an important call? What if my wife just got in a car accident or something?
        That's why I have an established emergency protocol with my family members. If they call and I don't answer the phone, I'm busy, so leave a voice or text message. If it's an emergency, either put 911 in your callback number or 911 in your text message.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by elrous0 ( 869638 ) *
        I am certainly no technophobe, but a cell phone is one piece of technology which I do not carry (and don't want to). I suppose that it has a safety advantage, but to me that just isn't worth the hassle and annoyance of constant interruptions. Nothing pisses me off more than to try to have a face-to-face conversation with one of these cell addicts. It wouldn't bother me so much if they were getting *important* calls, but 90% is the time, it's one of their family members calling to basically say "What's up?"
    • by bug1 ( 96678 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:47AM (#22987424)
      Introverts have a high level of cortical stimulation, they dont _need_ external events to stimulate them, they like quite time.

      Extroverts have a low level of cortical stimulation, they need external events to stimulate their tiny^W minds, leave them in a quite room (or a library) for a few hours and they go crazy.

      I expect extroverts would enjoy having people call them and give their brain something to do.
      • by iBod ( 534920 )
        That's a bit of a generalization, wouldn't you say?

        Some of the finest minds in science, art, engineering, literature and politics have been highly extrovert.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Culture20 ( 968837 )
          Finest minds? Politics?
          Seriously though, many of the finest minds in those fields were eccentric, not necessarily extroverted. Eccentricity sometimes seems like the epitome of introversion: a near-complete disregard for the opinions of others.
    • by smilindog2000 ( 907665 ) <bill@billrocks.org> on Monday April 07, 2008 @08:10AM (#22987642) Homepage
      Sometimes it is introverts. My ex-wife suffered from both panic disorder and social phobia. I found a great web site with hundreds to thousands of insightful posts about living with panic disorder. On the same host, I found a single post about social phobia:

      "Is anyone out there?"
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by duffbeer703 ( 177751 ) *
      I think there's larger implications to technologies like Twitter. Do you really want a public record of your comings and goings out there for the world to see?

      I'm not an introvert, but I also don't really care for people knowing everything about me either. And honestly, I'd don't really want to know about whatever nonsense my associates are up to. IM is a really good tool IMHO, but the newer stuff like twitter doesn't seem to have much of a practical application other than among students who actually care a
  • Invisibility (Score:4, Informative)

    by dreamchaser ( 49529 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:13AM (#22987210) Homepage Journal
    I just stay invisible on IM most of the time. If someone is on that I want to talk to, I can message them. My close friends and family know that if I am around I'll answer them even if they can't see them.

    I also don't feel the need to instantly answer, even on private work related IM. If it's urgent sure, but urgent matters warrant a phone call generally. I place IM somewhere in between email and phone for the sense of urgency factor. Of course the actual content and context of the message matters and everything in life should be taken case by case :)

    People stress themselves out too much with the 'OMG I JUST GOT IM'ED I'D BETTER ANSWER RIGHT AWAY'.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by madfancier ( 1111009 )
      The status message can help decrease the number of interruptions. For example, status like "away" may bring people to stop writing to you altogether. The "online" status is a green light to any meaningless conversation, and complaining that I don't reply. That's why I prefer to keep my status on "Eating grapefruits" with a busy icon, always. If there is anything important - they attempt to reach me, but I get the freedom to decide if I continue the conversation. If there is nothing important, they would
      • Yes when I am not invisible, especially on private work IM, I often set status messages. My primary public IM id's are so old now though that my buddy lists are HUGE. Invisibility helps when you don't want to hear from some guy you played Quake with years ago, or a former girlfriend for that matter.

        I love your graefruit id. I might just steal it. Can I subscribe to your newsletter?
    • by dbcad7 ( 771464 )
      I'm guilty of invisibility too.. and it relates to the mix of family that are contacts.. Usually the adults are no problem. they will IM you with something that you don't mind.. it's the kids, with their.. "hi" .. "what are you doing ?" .. and basically nonsense.. that keep me invisible... and most of the other adults are doing the same thing.. it they have something they might want to say they go visible, and then the others go visible too, and the IM's are done.. and every goes back to pretending they are
  • by 0xdeadbeef ( 28836 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:14AM (#22987214) Homepage Journal
    Wait, so you mean the name isn't an explicit metaphor likening its users to mindless birds, sharing every tiny, half-formed thought that crosses their pea-sized brain to everyone within ear-shot?

    And because I don't want to hear it, they're trying to frame this as something wrong with me?
    • by iBod ( 534920 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:20AM (#22987248)
      Hey! Why WOULDN'T you want to know what I had for breakfast, what underwear I put on this morning and how many birds I can see on my lawn right now?

      What the hell is wrong with you? Some kind of weird 'introvert' eh?
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by jo42 ( 227475 )
      The first four letters of 'Twitter' are "Twit", which is British slang for "insignificant, foolish or annoying person" (wikipedia [wikipedia.org]).

      As well, TWIT can be the acronym for Totally Without Intelligence.

      So, there you go.
    • This reminds me of a guy that a friend and I used to IM with for a while back when I was willing to have AIM installed on my system. We began to notice a curious preponderance of "I'm taking a shower" away messages. We half-jokingly began to suspect this was some sort of come on. I remember thinking, yea so this is where technology has brought us?
  • introverts and IM (Score:5, Informative)

    by v1 ( 525388 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:15AM (#22987220) Homepage Journal
    I don't believe introverts regard IM the same way as face-to-face communications. I know a lot of people that are socially very shy in public, that practically live in IM or WOW etc.

    • I also know quite a few people like that. It's the face-to-face aspect that gets them, usually, and have no trouble writing, speaking on the phone, et cetera. One thing I notice frequently is that introverts don't ever start conversations via IM. I'll be looking at my buddy list and see 40 people online and ostensibly "available", but nobody ever seems to start a conversation unless I start it...
      • A lot of us have a hard time with crowds of people because we have bad eyesight. Makes it practically impossible to play the "eye and body language communication" game. If we didn't get corrective lenses until after we developed our social habits, it's a pretty difficult thing to change.

        I know if I'm out at a bar without my contacts, I can't tell which one is giving me the flirty look, which is giving me the dirty look, and which one has an adams apple.

        Needless to say, this can make the situation less tha
    • I don't believe introverts regard IM the same way as face-to-face communications. I know a lot of people that are socially very shy in public, that practically live in IM or WOW etc.

      I think part of that is because there's a high density of introverts in such media, and they tend to be more comfortable without all those meddling extroverts. ;)

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by IBBoard ( 1128019 )
      I think you missed part of the article (or, being /., all of it!) where it said that introverts aren't necessarily shy. Introverts are people who are tired by social interactions and would rather be doing things alone.

      Depending on how they play WoW, they may still be being introverted while playing - grinding on their own or whatever. The fact that they're playing an MMORPG on a PC rather than multiplayer gaming at someone's house on a console is more of an introverted preference.
    • Re:introverts and IM (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Bogtha ( 906264 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:35AM (#22987350)

      I know a lot of people that are socially very shy in public, that practically live in IM or WOW etc.

      Shyness and introversion are two different things. Introversion is a preference for being alone. Shyness is when somebody feels anxiety around other people.

      IM and other virtual communication can be good at alleviating the anxiety shy people feel, enabling them to socialise frequently, but it isn't going to do anything for an introvert who doesn't want to socialise frequently.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by MartinB ( 51897 )
        To be more correct: Intraverts gain their energy from being alone. Being with other people takes effort.

        Now, this is just a preference, so it can be overcome, but it takes effort and may not be accomplished as effectively as an Extravert (just like a right-hander writing with their left hand). Many Intraverts find it tiring, and requiring a period alone to re-energise.

        IM/virtual communication can lower (but probably not remove) the effort required to communicate with others, particularly compared to the pho
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      I believe the definition of introvert from wikipedia [wikipedia.org] is a better one than "someone who is shy". I know I am very introverted. It's not that I can't go out and talk to people, in fact I'm quite comfortable with mingling at parties and such, I just find more value in having a lot of "me time" and that's usually what I do. Going out to parties, constantly being in contact with people, and all that stuff wears me down. Before getting a girlfriend I was perfectly content with not having any substantial human con
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by sjames ( 1099 )

      Shy is different than introversion. I am an introvert personally. I don't feel the least bit uncomfortable in a social situation in person or on the phone.

      I DO avoid the phone mostly because too many people don't know when the conversation is over and too many people take it as an invitation to interrupt whatever I'm doing for a conversation they won't even remember an hour later.

      I prefer less frequent but more meaningful conversation.

      Introversion is confused with shyness primarily by extroverts who c

  • Work (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Zelos ( 1050172 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:20AM (#22987250)
    I definitely recognise myself in the article's description: I generally write 2 or 3 versions of an email before finally sending it and I really don't get on with IM-style communication.

    The problem I find with IM at work is that some people use it instead of doing their own research. I frequently get IM'd work questions that could have been solved with 1 google search or 30 seconds with the source tree and grep. Instead, because it's so easy, they interrupt me.
    • That problem is not just limited to sending IMs. People call and walk over all the time for tiny questions. However, the worst part is when they e-mail me the question, and then five minutes later, call or IM me with "Did you get my e-mail?". Runner up is the "Are you there?" "Well?" "Stop ignoring me!" "Argh!" when I've been away from my desk for 10s...
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by nosfucious ( 157958 )
      Unfortunately, if this is at work, it more than likely a part of "cover your arse" syndrone(sp?). They could look it that up, but rules of the blame game states that the everyone must have someone else to blame in the case of SNAFU.

      Answer, and you lose time "context switching" and being annoyed. Answer wrongly and, depending upon the size of the failure, you're screwed. Don't answer and you're probably just as screwed.

      The only way to win is not to play.

      Don't sign in to IM. Check your email once an hour or s
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by IBBoard ( 1128019 )
      Ditto - emails normally get written, checked over, and then sent. IMs are not always checked but they are in full prose rather than "leet speak", despite the fact that at 23 I'm in the right age range for unintelligible abbreviations. When I am on IM then I tend to stay as "busy" because I want to be available to people with questions about the mods/tools I make, but I don't want to be pestered by the "I want to talk about random crap even though you don't have a clue who I am" people.

      The slightest distract
    • Re:Work (Score:5, Insightful)

      by value_added ( 719364 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @08:13AM (#22987676)
      I definitely recognise myself in the article's description: I generally write 2 or 3 versions of an email before finally sending it and I really don't get on with IM-style communication.

      You mean to say you take the time and thought required to write something worth reading?

      There seems to be a trend in recent years for people to consider email another form of IM. Subscribe to mailing list with 10K users, and you'll find people repeatedly sending off unintelligible overly-abbreviated scraps of seemingly random thought without hesitation, forcing all 10K users to read and try and interpret their spew. For anyone that thinks, for example, one or more cryptic one-liners is acceptable, I'd suggest they stop and consider how many followups to followups are required when, by comparison, a coherent thought written out using complete sentences would have saved everyone both time and grief in almost all cases.

      Too much trouble or time to bother with? See how well you can communicate with your significant other using postit note reminders stuck on a refrigerator door before a misunderstanding and a day spent stewing over a perceived insult occurs.

      IM has its place and is no doubt useful (invaluable, even) in certain scenarios. If you accept that it's the quality of communication that matters, then the pervasive influence of IM can be characterised fairly as somewhere between an unfortunate habit and a disease. Not that there's ever been a golden age of electronic communication, of course. I do wonder how it is, though, that in a form of communication that's entirely written, people don't hesitate to offer the impression that they're either morons, or complete illiterates.

      My use of IM has devolved into occasional replies of "This is worth discussing. Call me when you have time and we'll take it up then." The rest is noise. No point in trying to do accomplish something when neither party has the time to deal with it, is there?
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by iBod ( 534920 )
      They used to say that about masturbation but most of the slashdotters seem to have emerged unscathed.
  • Block Button (Score:3, Insightful)

    by m50d ( 797211 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:32AM (#22987322) Homepage Journal
    If people's interruptions for trivial things are irritating, you have to tell them outright - there's no way to express your disapproval through tone of voice or so on. So you should feel no qualms about doing so.

    If they don't listen, that's what the block button is for. Pretty much all of the current generation IM systems have it.

  • "Nerds" don't want to be bothered.
    "Nerds" are the ones who realize that it is a waste of time
    "Nerds" don't need to be in constant communication to feel reassured
    "Nerds" don't want to waste their money on these services, unless it comes with really really cool hardware. And even then, the hardware must have cool software, and all of it must be modifiable.
    "Nerds" understand that being extroverted isn't the same as being popular, and don't care either way.

    "Nerds" understand that twitter, constant IM'ing
  • by rodrigoandrade ( 713371 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:41AM (#22987386)
    You may not like it, thse IM pop-ps may be annoying, but it beats answering the phone. At least with IM, I can interact with the person when I feel like it and/or have time. With the stupid phone, it's the other way around.

    Yes, I believe the telephone is productivity's worst enemy.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Parent is sadly at -1 currently and may be missed by many... mods - please mod up!

      He makes a very valid point. Personally, I don't use IM services very often, and like the author of TFA, I'm generally "signed in, but unavailable". If someone messages while I'm busy, I ignore it until I'm not busy, or about to take a coffee break, or cigarette break or whatever.

      Email, I use almost exclusively. If someone wants something from me that will take more than 10 seconds of my time to do, the ONLY way I'll acce

  • by BenEnglishAtHome ( 449670 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:47AM (#22987422)
    I had occasion to leave the cube a while back and spend a few days working around a conference table with a bunch of other folks in a very busy environment, the control room of a very large conference with thousands of people from all around the country.

    My tablemates were utterly confounded that I had no IMs, one of my cell phones was often off with an outgoing message of "I don't pick up these messages, so don't bother", that I never sent any text messages, that I used an old-school one-way pager, and that I actually checked incoming email "only" every couple of hours or so. They thought I was a complete neanderthal. Yet I was the IT guy for the conference. In fact, I had been specifically requested by the head of the planning team; he had worked with me before and valued not just my willingness to work long and hard but my ability to communicate face-to-face with the hordes of hyper managers and executives who inevitably showed up with work-stopping computer problem and have to be "handled" properly while they get their problems fixed.

    I got the assignment mostly because I was seen as a good communicator. Yet the entire rest of his staff (who I met for the first time at this event) thought I was nuts to be so out of touch.

    I've never thought that avoiding distractions and interruptions made for poor communication. Indeed, my attitude is quite the opposite. It also seems to be increasingly rare these days.

    Odd. To me, this is really, really odd.

    And yes, I am strongly introverted.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by secPM_MS ( 1081961 )
      No you are are not a tech dropout, at least I don't see you as one. But then again, I may viewed as one as well. When I was doing startups we would use IM to send messages to one another while engaging in conference calls, as it gave us a second channel to make sure that critical points were adequately covered.

      That is the only situation I have used IM in. Otherwise, I do not install the client if I can avoid it. Never log in if the client is installed, and never respond to invitations. In general, e-mail

  • Use IRC instead... (Score:3, Informative)

    by ciggieposeur ( 715798 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @07:56AM (#22987526)
    I only get on the IM networks when I have lots of time to blow off -- e.g. practically never. But I would do IRC at work in a heartbeat if only I could get most of my co-workers to use it.

    I don't know exactly why it works, but somehow IRC (especially with a good GUI client) takes the edge of IM just enough that it becomes a useful communication tool rather than constant interruptions. But you can still DCC someone to get IM-like functionality, even with file transfers.
  • I know plenty of very sociable people who, like myself, eschew IM, Twitter, texting and their ilk simply because there is no meaningful communication to be had in these media. It's all crap. The very nature of communication via misspelt sentence-fragments practically guarantees that no lucent or cogent transfer of information is possible.
  • by EWAdams ( 953502 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @08:07AM (#22987610) Homepage

    If your message is at all worth reading, it'll be worth reading in two hours when I have time for it. Sod instant messaging, I usually keep my phone turned off and somebody else answers my doorbell.

    It's not called being an introvert. It's called being a grownup, with work to do.
  • Resentment (Score:4, Insightful)

    by RAMMS+EIN ( 578166 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @08:37AM (#22987892) Homepage Journal
    I didn't read TFA, but I still think I can provide some interesting insights.

    First of all, I have my own reasons for not wanting to use certain "new" communication methods.
    A particularly strong one is resentment. Many "new" communication methods do the same thing
    that existing methods do, only worse. For example, the new method might be technically inferior
    because they use the wrong tool for the job, they might be limiting because they only allow
    certain types of use, where the existing tools were more flexible, or they might use proprietary
    protocols where the existing tools used open protocols.

    I don't like it when the new, inferior solution gets hugely popular, and then people think I'm weird
    for not wanting to participate. It is they who didn't participate in the existing system when it was
    there - and it is _because_ they jumped on the bandwagon of the new, incompatible system that this
    is even an issue. If people had stuck with the existing system, or if the new system had been
    compatible with the old system, or if the new system had been so much better that users of the old
    system all jumpd ship, there wouldn't have been any issue.

    For some reason, people don't understand this. They just expect me to sign up with the cool, new thing,
    or be left out. Not that they would be willing to try the existing, old thing...why jump through
    all the hoops to start using this thing that nobody else uses, when all it will do is give you _two_
    accounts that you have to maintain and all that? I understand that point very well, of course,
    the more because it is often the exact same situation _I_ am faced with!

    Sometimes, I quit bitching and just sign up already. I, too, want to stay in touch with friends,
    after all. Sometimes, I moan and rant until people get so annoyed they never bring up the
    subject again. And, on rare occassions, I actually manage to convince them that my way is really
    better. But, usually, it's a lost cause. Once enough people have started using the new system,
    there is no going back, because they are locked in. And me, I just feel like a grumpy, old, bearded
    hacker who thinks he knows better than everyone else - but all he's ever accomplished is
    alienating himself from many who might otherwise have been his friends.

    But hey, it's not all gloom and doom! I have a job that I love, where I get to use Debian and work
    with open source all day, and people actually appreciate my insights. Because, in business, you
    may stay afloat by doing the same thing as everybody else...but you only _really_ win by being
    _better_. And no, I don't have the illusion that my ideas are always the best - but, I try hard
    to make them as good as they can be, and sometimes, that leads to new insights that improve things
    for everyone. That is something that really makes me a _happy_ bearded hacker.

  • It's called talking to yourself.
  • As a pretty strong Intravert (yes, thanks for the MBTI introduction), I have to say that in many cases, the alternative to being IM'd is being *phoned* which is way more intrusive than IM. This does require that you've got your IM to *not* force itself to a foreground window on every new message, nor make an intrusive sound (my work machine has the sound off anyway).

    I also find that when I need to talk to someone in an interactive way (but when time is not absolutely pressing), IM has a much lower stress ba
  • Heh (Score:4, Insightful)

    by jotok ( 728554 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @10:28AM (#22989182)

    The result is a sometimes exasperated incomprehension on the part of the more extroverted.
    Pretty much everything introverts do results in exasperation and incomprehension on the part of extroverts.

    My friends: "What do you mean, you don't want to go out for drinks?"
    Me: "I mean, I had a rough week, and I'm entirely wiped out."
    Friends: "Exactly, that's why you should come out to a noisy social environment where you can be surrounded by random strangers who want your attention."
    Me: *shudder* Alright, but only if you can get me drunk enough to deal within 5 minutes of arrival.
    Friends: Deal!
  • Ridiculous (Score:3, Insightful)

    by JustNiz ( 692889 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @12:07PM (#22990640)
    So it seems along with the massive uptake of IM, facebook, myspace et al. mostly by all the teens and twentysomethings that we coming to the point where if anyone of any age choses not to be connected to everyone else ALL the time, then they are now labelled as introverts, the implication being that they are somehow deviant or have a psychological problem.

  • by LM741N ( 258038 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @02:25PM (#22992320)
    because it was so long ago, but historians say that when telephones were first installed in houses, they were considered an incredible invasion of privacy. People hated it when they rang. I kind of feel the same way about cell phones, except that caller ID tells me whether I should answer or not. Text messaging seems less invasive, but I haven't used it because my fingers are too big to even properly dial in those prescription numbers to Walgreens.
  • by phleb3 ( 954280 ) on Monday April 07, 2008 @04:14PM (#22993596)
    I can relate to Joe Kissell's pain. My worst job ever was a programming job where I was the only introvert in a group of extroverts. My supervisor, a massive extrovert, wanted everyone to use IM. The problem was that for the group, IM meant March Madness, pro football, baseball, golf, but rarely work. I could not concentrate on a problem for more that 5 minutes before the IM client would chime. When I turned it off to get work done, I was 'not a team player' and 'not friendly'. Soon I was cut out of all conversation, and then it was get rid of the guy who won't play along. I left, and found a better job where they understand my work style.

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