If you frequent the online world, then of course you will know
what a wikiHow is. Writing a wikiHow though? Yikes. There are thousands
of writers on wikiHow, so much so that many topics overlap and it
becomes difficult to be original or creative. So what does one write
about for their first wikiHow post? How to survive working at a country
club? How to roleplay in an established video game settings? How to
survive senior year of college? All great ideas, right?
When
searching for a job and seeing that a local country club is hiring, you
may feel apprehensive. You look at the advertisement and think "I can
never work there". The truth is, working at a country club is just
another job. With over 11,000 clubs in the United States alone (more
overseas), you would think there is a wikiHow on this subject. However,
there is no wikiHow on how to survive working at a country club. Most
people in a country club setting know: it is all about appearance. Employees should look happy, things should be pristine, and beautifully
presented. These are just a few ideas that can be touched upon in this wikiHow.
If online video gaming is your thing, then you've at
least heard of roleplaying. When the video game nerds and writing geeks
come out of the shadows and create a character within an already
established world. For some (like me) Massively Multiplayer Online
Roleplaying Games (MMORPGS) still have the word "roleplaying" in them.
Meaning, that is part of the fun. There is currently no wikiHow
describing how to have fun roleplaying in established settings. Passion
is one of the most important parts of roleplaying. If you do not enjoy
it, why would you do it?
Surviving senior year can be even
rougher. When you're in the last leg of your studies, when you're
finally just at the grasp of that diploma. Things seem easy sometimes,
but rough other times. You need a friend, a guide, a mentor. You need to
concentrate. But your need to be wild and free during your last
semester also calls. How do you balance it all? There are plenty of wikiHows about senior year of high school, but none about college.
These
are a few topics that have been chosen, and are perhaps the strongest topics for a wikiHow article. None of these have been done before and may prove useful to wikiHow users. More often than not, people find wikiHow helpful with even the most troubling and outlandish of topics. Each of these topics, most will agree, have a bit of trouble and outlandish in them, making them both interesting reads and the perfect wikiHow subjects.
Sunday, January 31, 2016
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Social Media Since the Early 2000s
Remember Myspace? The go-to social media website in the early 2000s? Where everyone needed friends and more friends. Where you could have Chris Brown on your background page and your mouse cursor turn into a glittery heart? Looking back, it was a fun time. However, I often wonder--about any social media, not just Myspace--if it does more harm than good.
Myspace eventually phased out of popular culture when Facebook made it's rise to fame (or infamy). Facebook got rid of the gratuitous details in favor of having apps connect you to all kinds of companies and other media outlets to keep you coming back. Some would argue that a website knowing what kind of underwear you wish to purchase based on something you "like" is a bit intrusive. Others would argue for convenience.The intrusiveness of social media, comes not from the creators and moderators of the social media websites, rather, I think it comes from its users. It goes without saying that the amount of information Facebook can gather about you to shove other media at you is rather absurd. However, it is up to the user to determine what Facebook gets to see and what it doesn't. If a user of Facebook only uses it for friends and family, then they don't have a need to "like" the Candy Crush Saga page. However, a user who likes all their favorite games and apps will get similar games and apps on their timeline, in the sidebars, all over their pages. Furthermore, the sharing of personal information on sites like Facebook is--again--the users choice. Questions such as sexual orientation and posting about what you're doing every second is a users choice, Facebook does not require you to post at any given intervals.
Social media can often be used for "good" and "evil." In the case of the good, there are constant posts on Tumblr that advocate or ask for help for needy people by way of GoFundMes or similar websites. "Reblogging" as Tumblr calls it, helps to spread the word and find people who are able to donate. The same goes for those that reblog projects on crowd-funding websites.
Tumblr--and websites like Tumblr--have a downside as well. It can serve heavily as a place for what the internet calls "trolls," people who get joy out of making fun of people. The problem with this is that, should it get out of hand, it can have serious penalties, like some people becoming depressed or committing suicide.
As much as I'd like to not admit it, media is moving rapidly toward being fully online. Social media connects us in ways that, even 20 years ago, no one would have even imagined. It is hard to say where this will take us. I hope that as time goes on, we will be able to be smarter about our media use. Do more fact checking, be smart about what we share and what we don't, and overall become better people because of it.
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