T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
104.1 | The Tube as a means of communicating | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | | Sun Oct 19 1986 22:06 | 22 |
| I am particulary interested in communicating via the tube. I subscribe
to a Videotex service and have established some good friendships
with people I have yet to meet.
I find it much easier to correspond by this means then to communicate
face to face.You do not have to face any interruptions. The written
word generally requires more attention than the spoken word. You
are not inhibited by the body language of the person you are
communicating with.
Another good feature is you learn about a person's mind before you
are prejudiced by their appearance. This can work well in both
directions. You could be turned on by a pleasing physical appearance
or turned off by a not so pleasing appearance. The tube prevents
this initial reaction and if and when you do meet the relationship
has a strong foundation and is not handicapped by looks or lack
off.
I believe the things just discussed are true of professional as
well as personal relationships. There are a lot of little tests
out there that tell which type of a learner you are, I think there
are just as many different kinds of communicators.
|
104.3 | ???Reach out and touch someone??? | ATFAB::REDDEN | Listening slowly | Mon Oct 20 1986 12:19 | 10 |
| Two days ago I would have said that an example of a bad match between
relationship type and communications channel was sexual and telephone.
Then I found a FORUM magazine in the seatpocket on an airplane.
It had about fifty ads for "Phone Sex". Apparently it works for
a lot of people, based on the number of ads. I was sufficiently
curious to explore how it worked, but I don't possess an appropriate
credit card. Probably just as well. Anyway, I am a little stunned
by how wrong I was about something that seemed so obvious.
|
104.4 | Heavy phone conversations give me BAD feelings | RICKS::KRAVITZ | Terrapin | Mon Oct 20 1986 20:32 | 17 |
| I believe that the telephone can be the worst way to communicate,
especially when having problems in a relationship. The telephone
offers immediacy without intimacy. You don't get a chance to proofread
or make corrections. Letter writing offers the oppotunity to be
more precise in meaning and sentiment, and tends to keep overreaction
to a minimum. You can't hang up on a letter.
Face-to-face communication also has advantages over the telephone.
There are more options for expression -- facial, body english (spanish ..)
come into play as much as voice.
Communication over the tube hasn't quite matured, so it's difficult
for me to say where it fits. There are some accepted idioms :-)
but there doesn't seem to be the set necessary for me to feel very
comfortable with it.
Dave
|
104.5 | $2.00 plus toll, if any... | ARMORY::MIKELISJ | Life's a Beach! | Tue Oct 21 1986 08:29 | 9 |
| Yeah, i am quite surprised to find how popular this sort of
activity is. A couple of weeks ago, i was glancing through
a local L.A. tabloid and was amazed to see how many ads were
listed for were for phone sex. Apparently, this must be a
popular pastime, at least in the Los Angeles area. I guess it
could fall under the category of safe sex, but not my cup of
tea.
-jim-
|
104.6 | phone abuse | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis the Menace | Wed Nov 12 1986 16:49 | 29 |
|
Having been brought up with a modicum of telephone etiquette, I
usually try to be polite and patient when calling someone. However,
I have found that I have little tolerance when I am on the receiving
end of a phone call from some stranger trying to sell me insurance
or storm windows, or whatever. Worse yet, when it's some automatically
dialed computer messages telling me to answer with my age, etc.
at the sound of the beep.
For the computers there is no point in waiting to give a rude response,
but I sometimes cut a person off in midspeal to tell them that I
am not interested, and then hang up. I know these people are just
trying to do a job, but I do not feel that just because I've got
a telephone number in the book is any reason for them to nail one
of my feet to the floor.
Another form of phone abuse is to make annoyance calls in the middle
of the night. This differs from the heavy breathing obscene calls,
in that once they've roused you out of bed at 4:00 a.m., they've
gotten their revenge or whatever.
These two problems come to my mind together because since cutting
somebody's phone-pitch off a couple of weeks ago, we have gotten
four of the latter type of call. As a defense we have had to put
the answering machine on with the sound turned off. I can't help
but wonder if the two are related. Am I paranoid, or do you think
some of these people are sufficiently frustrated at being in such
a dead-end job that they take it out on those who rebuff them?
|
104.7 | Technology-based interpersonal communications | ATFAB::REDDEN | learning for profit | Wed Nov 12 1986 17:30 | 17 |
| Ref .6 On phone abuse
It seems to me that the problem of other people controlling when
they talk to me is worse with every technology-based communication
medium. Certainly people demanding my immediate attention by making
my phone ring is aggravating, but I get more hassled to discover
35 unread messages in my inbox every morning. Especially when
most of the stuff is not stuff I would have asked to recieve. In
either case, someone else has control over what I see/hear, and
I want that control back.
I think the same issue can develop on an interpersonal level. It
is much easier to tell me to "buzz off" in a way that will stick
if we are eyeball-to-eyeball than via a mail or phone message.
(not that you would *EVER* want to do that) Technology based
communications mediums are probably more effective for the
communication of facts and less effective for communication of feelings.
|
104.8 | So call me a grouch... | ANYWAY::GORDON | Random Emotion Generator | Wed Nov 12 1986 21:19 | 22 |
| It so happens that my answering machine fields most of the
calls I get from the "electronic time-sharing salesmen" or whatever.
I'm never home for them. I actually got one at my DTN one day!
I hang up immediately when I do happen to get them.
Humans trying to sell me stuff through my phone get a polite
"I'm not interested" and disconnected. I refuse all advertising
material handed out outside T stations as a matter of course. I
stare down people looking for money on the streets. (Charities
*sometimes* excluded) I refuse to be swayed by Vax MAIL telling
me what a wonderful thing it is to donate money to the United Way.
(I considered sending a nastygram to the person who kept sending
them to me and asking to be removed from the dist list, but they
stopped before I got sufficiently riled...). I do not even open
"Publisher's Clearing House" or "Exciting Contest - You may have
*WON* ***The State of Maine***" time-sharing offers addressed to
my non-existent wife.
I'm about ready to tell my college alumni office to stuff it!
Communication abuse runs rampant in America...
|
104.9 | Phone abuse | STAR::MURPHY | down the foggy ruins of time... | Thu Nov 13 1986 10:21 | 34 |
|
> Communication abuse runs rampant in America...
So true. It struck me a while back how a _conceptually_ simple enhancement
to the phone system would help to eliminate a lot of phone abuse. Imagine
this: your phone has an LCD window on it that displays the number which
called you on any incoming phone call. The number is displayed as soon as
the phone starts ringing, so you can even decide whether or not to answer
it. This eliminates the present inequality in phone calls where the caller
knows who he is calling, but the callee does not unless the caller chooses
to honestly identify himself.
The problem of harassing and abusive calls would be greatly reduced
since offenders could be much more readily identified. As for junk
calls, it would at least be a lot easier to ignore them.
The technology exists to do this. Consider: anytime you make a toll
call, even to the next town, the phone system remembers your number
and the called number at least until your next phone bill. The signaling
required to transmit a phone number can be done in a number of ways,
and phones could easily be made which would recognize and receive a
stream of digits and display them on an LCD window.
More pertinent to the comment a couple replies ago: a friend of mine told
me of what he thought to be a similar situation a while back. Out of
annoyance, he was really nasty to some phone canvasser, and he got a number
of harassing phone calls for a while after that. It's surprising, but it
may well happen. There are actual people on the other end of those calls
(excluding of course the computerized calls), and I can't really blame them
for the fact that their job creates a confrontational situation. They
probably need the work. Tempting though it may be to do otherwise,
it's probably best just to hang up quickly and quietly.
Dan
|
104.10 | Partial Solution to mail abuse | KELVIN::RPALMER | Handyman in Training | Thu Nov 13 1986 10:30 | 31 |
|
Re: Mail and Phone Abuse
There is an address that you can ask to remove you name from
mailing and phone lists. I do it every year and it seems to keep
the junk to a minimum. Be sure to include your address, phone number
and the names of all the people in residence. The address is:
Direct Marketing Associates
6 East 43rd St
New York, NY 10017
You can also request each of your credit card companies not
to sell your name to J Random Advertising Company. They make lots
of money selling names. Be careful what you fill out. I never give
my phone number on warranty registrations.
I do not like junk mail but I can always just throw it out.
I find random phone calls from investment companies, charities,
ect as an invasion of my privacy. I think random recorded calls
are a crime and should be outlawed. I have written many letters
to my representatives about it. Remember to get mad at the right
person. It does no good to pop off at the salesman or the person
taking the survey. They are just trying to do their job. Complain
often and loudly to the head of the company.
I find phone calls late at night very disturbing. My solution
is not to answer the phone after midnight as long as my wife is
home. What ever it is can wait until morning.
=Ralph=
|
104.12 | well, it's MY telephone, after all... | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Nov 13 1986 12:59 | 29 |
| I've probably gotten more than my share of obscene, threatening,
and harrassing phone calls - very disturbing to get several calls
in a row late one night recently from someone threatening to kill me! I
finally gave up and disconnected the phone with the bell, leaving
just the answering machine to field subsequent calls, so now we
have a cassette tape full of the threatening caller, for evidence
for the police if anything should happen. I do not like to not
answer my phone if I am home, no matter what time of day or night
it is. I got into that habit during the long months when my father
was dying of cancer. I wish that my phone would display the caller's
number, or better yet, how about a programmable answering machine
so that "junk" calls don't ring the phone (let 'em talk to the tape
recorder...), and so I know who the callers are. That would probably
put a stop to the various sorts of harrassing calls (I've used several
techniques to get rid of the obscene ones, but they honestly don't
bother me as much as the threats, unless they call when I am asleep).
The theory that the phone is there for MY convenience, not other
people's, doesn't completely hold up if I know that I might miss
something important by deciding that it is inconvenient for me to
answer the fool thing.
I don't mind telephone solicitations too much: I am not usually
home, and on the rare nights when I am I often get several. I try
to get rid of those folks as quickly as I can while still being
polite: the people calling need the job, and I don't have to be
nasty to them just because I am not interested. I've NEVER gotten
a computerized call. Maybe the tape recorder has; it is often filled
with a succession of dial tones when I get home.
|
104.13 | keeping abreast of sales calls during dinner | RAYNAL::OSMAN | and silos to fill before I feep, and silos to fill before I feep | Thu Nov 13 1986 15:40 | 34 |
| Yes, I too get really annoyed when my precious week-night time-at-home
is invaded by an insurance salesperson phone call, or a magazine
subscription sales call.
What's even more annoying is when they keep trying to convince me
after I say "no thankyou".
I've had a great fantasy about how to handle one of those calls in
a more fun way than merely hanging up. Being male, the fantasy is
that the annoying phone call has a female at the other end. It goes like
this:
me: Hello?
other: Good evening, is this Mr. Osborn ?
me: (annoyed already) I'm Mr. OSMAN, may I help you ?
other: Good evening, Mr. OSMAN, you don't know me, but I've got some
very good news for you. Time-Life Books is pleased to . . .
me: Excuse me, what's your name ?
other: Uh, oh, Maryanne. As I was saying, Time-Life books would like
to
me: Maryanne ?
other: Yes ?
me: Maryanne, you have a really nice voice on the telephone. What
I would just love to do is slide up your blouse and suck on
your left breast. Would you like that ?
This last line of course is to be delivered quite SLOWLY (so she doesn't
say "what?", gently, soothingly,
with the sound of genuine invitation. Whatever her response, it's
bound to be more interesting than the normal sales call!
For full impact, I think it's important that the first name be obtained
and then uttered in the invitation.
/Eric
|
104.14 | solution | ARGUS::COOK | Dreadful Mourning | Fri Nov 14 1986 05:48 | 2 |
|
Answering machines are beautiful. 8^)
|
104.15 | The tape recorder isn't the perfect solution | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Nov 14 1986 13:25 | 41 |
| Os, I know you wouldn't REALLY do that (would you??). :-)
Answering machines can be circumvented, too, sad to say. My brother
and I have both had answering machines for a couple of years now,
having purchased them to make sure we always had a way to get telephone
messages from the rest of the family (since everyone lives in different
states) while our father was undergoing (unsuccessfully, as it turned
out, sniff) cancer treatment. (That way, you are pretty much
gauaranteed to eventually get that dreaded message when you return
home from work "Honey, this is mother. Please call me at home as
soon as you return. (sounds of sobbing) >click<)
The things turned out to be generally useful enough that we both
have kept them. Now, my brother at one time worked for the ACLU
(in fact, that was almost two years ago, and he has been unable
to find a job since then, since he is blind, but that is another
story). As a liberal organization, they are not a good place to
work for if you live in Des Moines, Iowa, as he does. Now, we were
both born in Iowa (in Ames), and I don't mean to put down the state
or its people, but Des Moines seems to be populated with a large
percentage of people who do NOT like the ACLU or its ideas. They
sufficiently harrassed my brother and others who worked in that
office that he eventually could not take it and quit (also, his
landlord was getting harrassing calls for harboring my "undesireable"
brother and was making noises at him about moving, which he could
not afford). Recently, some of the right-wing Christian groups
which were doing most of the harrassing starting calling and filling
Ed's tapes with "inspirational" messages (usually "All you liberals
are going to BURN BURN BURN!"), filling the entire 90 minute tape
with this rubbish and causing the machine to rewind and overwrite
legitimate messages on the beginning of the tape, such as calls
from potential employers. (Now, these uncaring people do not realize
that Ed has not worked for ANYONE since they drove him out of the
ACLU job, but they still have his phone number. They probably do
not care a whole lot that they caused a blind person who was starting
to make it on his own to become a burden on society, since he was
(is) a "liberal".....) Eventually he got
the police involved, and some of the phone harrassers were arrested
(I do not think they were prosecuted yet).
So, the tape recorder is not a perfect answer, either. Sigh.
|
104.16 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Reality is frequently inaccurate | Fri Nov 14 1986 14:19 | 15 |
| Re .15:
This isn't ANSWERING_MACHINE.NOTE, but... modern answering
machines are quite a bit smarter than older ones. Mine, for instance,
limits messages to one or four minutes (my choice), and at one minute,
that's a LOT of calls to fill a tape. Furthermore, when the tape
is full, it stops answering. Some machines will switch to an
alternate announcement ("Please call back later") when the tape
is full.
I am a firm believer in answering machines to insulate one from
pesky people who feel that knowing my phone number (or even worse,
those who simply dial all numbers in an exchange in sequence) is
an invitation to invade my privacy.
Steve
|
104.17 | Reach out and slug somebody. | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis the Menace | Fri Nov 14 1986 14:40 | 11 |
|
Reading .15 makes me feel very un_liberal, in fact it makes me want
to KILL.
|
104.18 | It's worse than you think... | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Nov 14 1986 17:42 | 7 |
| I agree! But I try to restrain impulses like that...
My brother's machine DOES limit messages, to fifty seconds. It
is sort of a nuisance that it does so since it means that I have
to call it several times if I need to leave him a lengthy or
complicated bunch of information. In order to fill up his 90 minute
tapes, the harrassing callers were calling OVER AND OVER AGAIN!
|