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The Many Faces of Facebook
ОглавлениеIN THIS CHAPTER
Understanding Facebook
Knowing what you can and can’t do on Facebook
Finding out how Facebook is different from other social sites
Seeing how different people use Facebook differently
Think about the people you interacted with throughout the past day. In the morning, you may have gone outside to get the paper and chatted with a neighbor. You may have asked your kids what time they’d be home and negotiated with your partner about whose turn it is to cook dinner. Perhaps you spent the day at the office, chatting, joking, and (heaven forbid) getting things done with your co-workers. In the midst of it all, you may have sent an email to all the people in your book club, asking them what book should be next and what date works for the most people. Maybe while you sat on the bus you read the newspaper or called your mom to wish her a happy birthday or searched on your phone for a good restaurant to go to for drinks with friends. This is your world, as it revolves around you.
Each of us has our own version of the world, and as we interact with each other, those worlds intertwine, interplay, and interlock. Maybe your best friend from college was the one to introduce you to the book club, and then someone from the book club recommended a good restaurant. This network of people you interact with — your friends, acquaintances, and loved ones — exists online. Facebook is the online representation of the web of connections between people in the real world.
Now, you may be asking, if this network exists in the real world, why do I need it online, too? Good question (gold stars all around). The answer is that having this network online facilitates and improves all your social relationships. In other words, Facebook makes your life easier and your friendships better. It can help with practical things such as remembering a friend’s birthday or coordinating a party. It can help also with the more abstract aspects of relationships, things like staying close with family you aren’t physically near or talking about your day with friends.
Getting set up and familiar with Facebook does take a little work (which you know, or else you wouldn’t be starting on this book-length journey). It may feel a little overwhelming at times, but the reward is worth it — we promise you.