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Back To The Future
I've been reading Kurt Andersen's Heyday on this trip to Greece. It's about life in the US in the middle of the 19th Century (the heyday of the US?). There's this scene early in the book where one of the main characters, Skaggs, who lives in NYC sends a friend a telegram letting him know that John Jacob Astor, the hated landlord of NYC, had finally died. His friend sends him a telegraph back letting him know that Niagra Falls had just frozen over and was no longer a waterfall. Skaggs runs uptown to the newspapers and tries to sell the news but nobody believes him until the news arrives via official channels the next day.
As I was reading that part of the book, I got a twitter message on my phone from Dave Winer that Barry Bonds had just tied Hank Aaron's record with a blast in San Diego.
The irony was not lost on me. Both telegrams and twitter messages are short messaging systems. Twitter by design. Telegraph because the cost of sending a message was so high. But a lot can be conveyed in a short burst of text. Clearly we've been getting our news forever from a mix of personal and official news channels. I think with the advent of mobile broadcast messaging systems like Twitter, we'll be getting more, not less, of our news from "citizen journalists".
Comments (4) | Posted August 5, 2007 in Venture Capital and Technology
Comments
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Posted by: Michael Long | Aug 5, 2007 5:10:46 AM
Who's Barry Bonds?
Posted by: jackson | Aug 5, 2007 11:47:18 AM
Of course the cost of telegrams back in the "heyday" kept the signal to noise ratio in check. No comparable filter exists for Twitter...yet.
Posted by: Chris Ceppi | Aug 5, 2007 12:25:57 PM
the telegraph didnt really create short text news -- rather, it created wire services, collaborations/coops of news gathering organizations which -- to save cost -- shared infrastructure costs and wire stories. thats how the associatd press (AP) and united press international (UPI) were born. but the news texts were as long or as short as writer and editors wantd them to be
maybe a better analog for twitter would be the ticker tape machines -- short bursty information by and for and amongst the relatively tiny group of cognesceti who gave a darn
Posted by: Steve Kane | Aug 5, 2007 4:35:13 PM
A VC