Tag Archives: Grassroots Skeptics

So long, Mark Zuckerberg, and thanks for all the fish

Facebook was fun. I liked it a lot. I learned from experts in fields I’m interested in, and I reconnected with people I’ve known since I was born. But I’m (mostly) packing  up and moving on.

Most of this has to do with the changes they’re introducing. I’m not ragequitting — in fact I’m technically not quitting at all — but I might be tooooldforthisshitquitting. The older I get, the simpler I like things to be, and then I’ve also hit my limit on increasing privacy concerns.

I’ve felt more and more disconnected as all these new changes are supposed to enhance our experience. I can see from the scroll on the right people whose updates I want to see, the ones that no longer appear in my feed. Yeah, I know, I’m sure there’s a setting for this and a setting for that, and then new ones crop up and — yeah, I’m done. I can’t expend the energy any longer to accomplish what I want to do.

I’ve fallen in love with Tumblr, which I tried out this week before I change all my Facebook settings to “Only me.” (I don’t want to delete the account entirely since I’ve got this page, my other silly page, and editing duties on Grassroots Skeptics to maintain.)

To me, Tumblr is a happy medium between the very limited communication but widespread connection of Twitter, and the ability to share all kinds of media without space limits from Facebook. The interface is smooth and clean, the settings are minimal but visual customization is infinite, and I can scroll downwards forever without anything stopping me from seeing every single post from everyone I’m following. It’s relaxing somehow, whereas Facebook feels crammed, creaky, and chaotic now.

I’m not backing away from contact; Facebook private messages should still work, plus Twitter and email and Skype and almost every other way we can interact. I’m not backing away from this blog, either, all appearances to the contrary. I’m changing both my attitude and my intake of social media, is all. My tumblelog, dispatchesfromexile.tumblr.com, is now where everything I used to share on Facebook will go. This will still be for longer, better sourced (sometimes!) and more thoughtful posts. And my intention is to make up the time I’m saving reading and commenting on Facebook for other activities, like writing for other projects that I have seriously neglected. I want to get back into making music as well, something else that’s fallen by the wayside.

So for now, I’m going to take a cue from the Muppets, and I hope you’ll join me there. (No, not on the slopes.) Please let me know who you are if you follow me and I ought to be following you back!

Post to Twitter Post to Delicious Post to Digg Post to Facebook Post to Reddit Post to StumbleUpon

Weekend sendoff: Only connect

This week, Skepchick asked the question “what kind of skeptic are you?” This question comes at an interesting time for me, but has been apt for quite a while. I’m often frustrated by my lack of capacity to do more with my interest in skepticism. Being as ravenous as I am to learn more about it, I feel I’m missing out on a lot of cool events that take place in Southern California’s robust skeptical community. (Of course, back when I was healthy, I was working and going to school, and didn’t have the time to do much more than attend a Skeptic Society conference.)

Surly Amy, Surly Johnny, carr2d2 & Tim3P0 listen to Brian Hart of

Surly Amy, Surly Johnny, carr2d2, and Tim3P0 listen to Brian Hart of the Greater L.A. Skeptics Meetup Group (not pictured)

Last week I had the great pleasure to enjoy some delicious shabu shabu and some even more delicious skeptical banter with an awesome group of people. It reminded me that, per Monday’s post, I really need to damn the torpedoes and go full speed ahead a little more frequently than I do now, because it’s just too much fun to be around like-minded people who also love to talk about this stuff. I’m lucky that Paul is also a skeptic — he comes to it from his engineering background and love of magic — so we can go to events together which makes it easier on me physically, not to mention how great it is to have a partner who shares my enthusiasm!

Of course I will still be blogging about skepticism (among the usual other things) here, and in February I will be returning to Skeptically Speaking‘s “Speaking Up” segment. I’m also very happy to mention that I’ve joined the team at Grassroots Skeptics as its editorial manager — doesn’t that sound fancy? — so I get to scratch that itch to volunteer my time for a cause I believe in.

I’m looking forward to upping the “active” quotient of my skepticism this year by continuing to connect and work with passionate and talented people, both online and offline. To illustrate the point, I send you off with a comic from the community favorite Tree Lobsters! by Steve DeGroof, whom I met during a Virtual Drinking Skeptically chat. I was in on I believe the first Twitter chat about confectionopathy, a treatment I am seriously considering. And by the way, Tree Lobsters! is running a fundraiser right now to benefit Engineers Without Borders.

sweet

Post to Twitter Post to Delicious Post to Digg Post to Facebook Post to Reddit Post to StumbleUpon