Jul. 16th, 2011

google

Jul. 16th, 2011 07:19 am
lauradi7dw: (Default)
A number of people find my resistance to Google mysterious, or maybe offensive. I am told from time to time that I really need to switch over to gmail, and that lots of other companies read their customers' emails, blah blah blah. I really love some of the chrome commercials, but that isn't enough to make me use it. I sometimes use google's search engine, mostly because it seems to be the default on lots of computers, and I cba to change it (actually, that's a pretty good endorsement, in some ways. Presuming that some readers (if any) wouldn't recognize that, I checked in google, yahoo, and bing. It's the 3rd hit on google, the bottom of the first page on bing, and not even on the first page of yahoo). I find a lot more images but also a lot more mistakes on google images than yahoo, and it was my impression that clicking on some of the google images was inviting viruses to try to get me, so I quit.
This is from Neil Gaiman, about google+. It's interesting to me that nobody has suggested I try it (I know that one must be invited), because I still get harassed to join facebook.

"I like Twitter. I tolerate Facebook. Google+ seemed (for me) like an awkward mash-up of the two. I found the continual stream of notifications telling me that another 500 people I did not know had put me into circles and that lots of other people I didn't know had mentioned me really irritating and distracting, and I couldn't turn them off or easily find the signal in the noise (or find my friends in the flood of people putting me into circles), and when I grumbled about it mildly (agreeing with Warren Ellis that I couldn't find friends I'd actually want to put in circles among the thousands of people who I was being told were putting me in circles) a couple of hundred people explained to me that I was Doing It Wrong.

It was the "You're Doing It Wrong" messages that were my personal tipping point. As far as I'm concerned, the mark of a good social network is that it either does what it was made to do easily and cleanly, or it's bendy enough that you can make it do what you want. And being told "you're trying to use it like Facebook but really it's like Twitter!" just made me strangely nostalgic for Twitter. And as Twitter was still there, I cancelled my Google+ account, feeling at this point that I didn't need another time sink, another place to check, another distraction from work or from life.

(If you cancel your Google+ account, Google+ will then start helpfully emailing you notifications every time someone puts you in a circle or mentions you, even if you had all of the "Email notifications" options previously turned off. This is fixable when you discover the "unsubscribe" option at the bottom of the emails that wasn't visible when they came in on your phone, but you shouldn't have to unsubscribe from something you didn't subscribe to.)"
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