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Ypulse Quote: The 'Texting Gap'

Posted by anastasia on 03-25-2008

I loved this quote from Naomi S. Baron, author of Always On: Language in an Online and Mobile World, is Professor of Linguistics at American University in Washington, DC., putting our concern about the "texting gap" into a global perspective. From the blog post:

Viewed from the other side of the Atlantic, text messaging by adolescents in the United States seems reminiscent of the early days of desktop publishing. Once we reveled in experiments with point size, font style, and color. The results were often graphic disasters, as we failed to heed the Delphic warning, "Nothing in Excess." Gradually word processing became a workaday tool, and our documents calmed down.

In Europe, text messaging (generally known as SMS) first appeared in 1993, giving young people a decade more experience with the medium than their American counterparts. What is still often a toy in America, played on with youthful abandon, has settled into a pedestrian appliance elsewhere, particularly as teen mature into young adults.

Sort of related:
danah asks what age should kids get their first phones and apparently there is some global research coming out of Northeastern University about teens and multitasking….

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Categorized under: Mobile



One Response to “Ypulse Quote: The 'Texting Gap'”

  1. Gareth Says:

    As someone who's experienced both European and US mobile culture, the main cause of the American public's delay in adopting these technologies is the restrictions and penny pinching of the carriers.

    European networks are far more open at every level (GSM vs the patented, proprietary CDMA) and there's far more heated competition to offer the best price and the best technology.

    When I was 14 or so I had a prepaid phone which gave me 300 free text messages, free incoming calls and 10c/min calls for $20 a month. The US still doesn't offer rates that cheap without a contract.

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