Tag Archives: Facebook

Antisocial Networks

I’m always a little suspicious of stories like this.  I always wonder what the rest of the story is.  On the other hand, I can’t really say I doubt this happened exactly as stated.  That’s why I decided to post it this way.  Insert grain of salt here and then do as you feel necessary.  I hate to say it, but I think it is probably only a matter of time before the same kind of thing happens with Facebook if it hasn’t already.  It’s the world we live in.  Nevertheless I am disinclined to increase my usage of Twitter after reading this.  It is for me primarily a tool to more effectively keep my Facebook profile up to date anyway.  The extra exposure is just a bonus and is devalued by having to put up with all the spam followers.

James L. Paris’ Christian News and Politics: Banned From Twitter For Supporting Rush Limbaugh

Well, I guess I know how Rush Limbaugh feels. This week I posted a blog piece supporting Rush and I received thousands of visits to my blog. I also engaged in probably one hundred ‘debates’ with people on Twitter about the whole Rush Limbaugh/NFL controversy. Today, I received the below message that I have been suspended from Twitter for one week. Obviously, someone did not like what I was saying in support of Rush. You will notice that my blog article was ‘re-tweeted’ 150 times by those that read it (not by me). I guess I am making some liberal at Twitter upset. Let’s make them really mad, please click on the “tweeted” button above and that will bring even more attention to this issue on their own network.

Posted in Politics, Prowling the Web | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Ten Commandments If Your Boss is Your Facebook Friend

  1. Thou shalt not ignore thy boss’s friend request.
  2. Thou shalt never delete thy boss.
  3. Thou shalt not post updates to thy profile while thou shouldst be working though thy boss fill the earth with updates.
  4. Thou shalt not let thy gaming app post updates to thy profile during working hours.
  5. Thou shalt not curse thy company, neither shalt thou confess openly that thou hast dumped its stock.
  6. Thou shalt not post updates about thine other job.
  7. Thou shalt not post pictures of thy new Porsche when thou hast not been paid the denarii to buy a bicycle.
  8. Thou shalt not write words of love on the wall of the one who worketh beside thee.
  9. Thou shalt not call thy boss a fool, for then thou shalt be in danger of the Hell of fireing.
  10. Thou shalt not tell of thine interview, but if thou hast violated these other nine, thou mayest do so, for verily I say unto thee that thy time with the one who rules over thee now is short.
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Facing Down Facebook

Thanks to the folks that invited me to join as a friend on Facebook.  I have to tell you though that it is a frustrating site for someone who uses a screen reader.  I’m not sure I could have used it at all were it not for the little vision I have.  As you’re signing up, it has drop-down lists that update as you go.  You’re supposed to click one of the choices, but if you’re using a screen reader you don’t even know they are there.  I don’t know if it is essential to click one of the choices, but it appeared that there was hidden info for each choice that you couldn’t enter if you couldn’t’ see the list.  For example, I can type in Texas Tech, or Oak Park High School.  In the first case it might have been an exact match and picked up Texas Tech in Lubbock, but what if I had typed Texas Tech University instead?  Oak Park is listed simply as Oak Park High, not Oak Park High School, and there are several of them.  Chances are my entry would not be matched appropriately at all unless I could see to click the list item that showed Kansas City as the location.  Admittedly that wouldn’t matter a lot to me.  It was a big place and I didn’t know how to make friends.  A lot of people knew who I was because I could be seen in the halls with a cart full of the extra things I needed to help with class work, and a few were unfortunately run over by it.  I didn’t know many people.  I think I might remember one or two names.  Then there’s the visual confirmation.  I understand why they do that.  In fact, I use it on the church’s site out of the same necessity.  It keeps malicious people from running scripts that sign up multiple accounts and spamming everyone they can find.  I have an audio confirmation link so that someone who is blind can get past the confirmation, and to their credit so do they, but I couldn’t understand it either.  It too must be garbled to keep someone from employing voice recognition and getting through.  On the second one I encountered I finally gave up after several misses on different phrases.  To get around dealing with that, you can have your account confirmed with a text message sent to your cell phone.  That’s great if you can see or can afford to shell out several hundred dollars for a phone that can talk.  To top it all off, they don’t give you a confirmation password box, so if you mistype your password as I apparently did you will not know until the site refuses to let you back in.  Maybe it was there and I missed it, but if so why did it let me in the first time?  The reset screen has the confirmation, but the page’s underlying code is not designed in a screen reader friendly fashion, so again I resorted to magnification.

 

I went through with it though.  Our church needs to get in touch with younger people.  This is one of the ways people communicate now, so I’ll eventually get around to setting up a Myspace profile too.  This just highlights the need for what we’re doing.  This post is a bit plaintive, but the truth is the world doesn’t conform to our needs, and should not be required to.  Though I am thankful for the help I get and know I couldn’t’ do without it, I am ultimately responsible for my life.  That is true for all of us.  Though I have indulged in a little complaining about a less than accessible web site, it’s up to me to deal with the world as it is.  I can ask for changes, but I have no right to demand them.

 

What I can do is make the world a little better for someone else, and that’s what we’re trying to do.  I’ve always been against creating enclaves of people with disabilities.  We need to be out in the “real world” doing what we were meant to do.  However, I see the need for a system of outreach and support that brings people to that place.  There are numerous organizations that will meet physical needs, and that’s important.  I expect we’ll do that and our church certainly does.  Sadly lacking are churches seeking to meet the emotional and spiritual needs of people affected by disability.  That has a physical component, in that we must go to them.  Many cannot come to us.  I have the same problem.  I’ve been known to pick churches simply because I could get there.  We have in mind a network of small churches in geographically convenient locations that can meet the needs of people like us.  We must give out of what we have been given.  We are blessed to be a blessing.

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