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Email (And Its Users) Not Getting Any Younger

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I tend to blink a few times upon receiving a handwritten letter, but there’s an increasing realization that really young people – and I’m only in my 20s – might have the same reaction to an email.

Email (And Its Users) Not Getting Any Younger With social networks like Facebook and MySpace providing messaging options, youngsters have been given one alternative; in the UK, it seems they’ve already taken advantage of it.

Various surveys, including a new one from AOL, also indicate that mobile instant messaging is growing in popularity.  To again turn to the UK, a report found that around 1.2 billion text messages are sent in that region every week.

Then there are services like Twittr, where communication falls somewhere between the complexity levels offered by a traditional social network and a text message.  Add something like AIM to the mix, and email looks decidedly slow and outnumbered.

Chad Lorenz gave the issue quite a bit of thought, however, and concluded, “It’s not hard to imagine a future communications command center where, on a single screen, you’ll be able to choose between sending an e-mail, instant message, status note, or blog post – or sending all of them at once – and then have all those bits of text neatly and securely archived.”

In fact, since Lorenz posted that idea, Google and at least a dozen startups have probably started working on it.

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    Sally Drumm

    Microsoft announced a few weeks ago that they are building software that creates a command center. The military has had the technology for years. It’s not the method of corresponding that we should trying to forecast, but the medium. The internet and telephone lines are what are really headed for the slag pile. The entire US communications infrastructure will be replaced by wireless within ten years. But even that is too slow. Wireless will be replaced as well – but by what? Satcom. Pretty obvious with a GPS in every vehicle, right?

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