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	<title>Comments on: Exploring latent value in your social networks &#8211; doing more with less</title>
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	<link>http://scottdrummond.org/2009/07/01/exploring-latent-value-in-your-social-networks-doing-more-with-less/</link>
	<description>Thoughts on Community and Conversation</description>
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		<title>By: Oscar</title>
		<link>http://scottdrummond.org/2009/07/01/exploring-latent-value-in-your-social-networks-doing-more-with-less/comment-page-1/#comment-2866</link>
		<dc:creator>Oscar</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Jun 2009 23:37:56 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>These are wise words (yours and Seths), we&#039;re all time-poor, so why waste precious minutes adding folks that you&#039;ll rarely interact with and who&#039;ll clutter up your feeds (FB, Twitter, etc). Popularity? Graduating from high school should make it apparent how futile and empty that pursuit can be.

5 years ago I was hopelessly addicted to MySpace, it seemed a great way to find new and local music and reconnect with friends, particularly those OS. But with the rise in social networking, I was being approached by randoms like a Salt Lake City swingers party. The worse came early, an old friend from school whom I&#039;d not seen in 6 years friended me, I wrote on his wall and tried to get a dialogue going. No replies, not so much as a direct message! Pretty obvious that he just wanted an impressive friend list.

I did make one true friend, a local hip hop artist who now composes jingles for my company and opened up the local hip hop scene to me. But I gave up on social networking as a mostly futile pursuit and only got back on the wagon 2 months ago. Having learned my lesson, I&#039;m keeping the numbers down to worthwhile connections. But this post reiterated why its so important to keep connections real.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>These are wise words (yours and Seths), we&#8217;re all time-poor, so why waste precious minutes adding folks that you&#8217;ll rarely interact with and who&#8217;ll clutter up your feeds (FB, Twitter, etc). Popularity? Graduating from high school should make it apparent how futile and empty that pursuit can be.</p>
<p>5 years ago I was hopelessly addicted to MySpace, it seemed a great way to find new and local music and reconnect with friends, particularly those OS. But with the rise in social networking, I was being approached by randoms like a Salt Lake City swingers party. The worse came early, an old friend from school whom I&#8217;d not seen in 6 years friended me, I wrote on his wall and tried to get a dialogue going. No replies, not so much as a direct message! Pretty obvious that he just wanted an impressive friend list.</p>
<p>I did make one true friend, a local hip hop artist who now composes jingles for my company and opened up the local hip hop scene to me. But I gave up on social networking as a mostly futile pursuit and only got back on the wagon 2 months ago. Having learned my lesson, I&#8217;m keeping the numbers down to worthwhile connections. But this post reiterated why its so important to keep connections real.</p>
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