WebProNews

Tag: inforgraphics

  • Facebook Friend Requests: to Accept or Not to Accept?

    Facebook is approaching that point of critical mass when it will soon completely converge onto our so-called real lives and everyone we know in First Life will also be people we are linked to on Facebook Life. As we lurch forward into this future, you will get Facebook friend requests from people who… eh, well, people who you might be trying to avoid when you’re making weekend plans.

    Sometimes you may even get friend requests from people who you actually don’t mind so much out there in the real world yet still aren’t exactly sure how you feel about when it comes to letting them in on your Facebook life. That meditation is preposterous and even causes one to question why you may consider these people friends or acquaintances in the first place, but it’s a regular meditation people go through nonetheless. For better or worse, these are the dramatic days of our Facebook lives.

    If you ignore or, more boldly, decline these Facebook friend requests, it will inevitably come back to haunt you. I have more than one first-hand experience in this unfortunate circumstance and, trust me, when someone mentions to you face-to-face that they sent you a friend request that you never replied to, there is little you can say that isn’t easily translated as, “That’s because I don’t actually like you that much.” The moment passes quickly enough yet it is an awkward moment all the same.

    Facebook, in what I imagine was a way to reconcile a user’s dilemma while also trying to maintain the high number of relationships that the site likes to boast about with their statistics, offers a feature that permits users to unsubscribe to users so you never need to unfriend somebody just to avoid seeing their updates. More, you can always create a filter that will cast out into the Land of Nod those slightly less-than-desirable Facebook friends and block them from seeing any of your “real” information on your account.

    But lord, that’s a lot of work just to maintain a pleasant social face, isn’t it? If Facebook really is becoming an outward extension of our personal lives, maybe it’s time to start acting as such and not worry about rejecting people on the site (especially if we don’t worry so much about rejecting them in the real world). To perhaps assist your forage into this brave new world, College Humor put together a helpful infographic that details the step-by-step consideration you should apply whenever someone requests your friendship on Facebook and you aren’t immediately certain what the best plan of response should be. While the infographic’s primary purpose is to entertain, there’s also some pertinent information to take away from this – especially if the friend requester happens to be an ex that broke your heart during your sophomore year of college.

    So now: sally forth, young and elder Facebookers alike, and screw your courage to the sticking-place when you know that clicking that “Not Now” button (which used to be called “Decline,” but Facebook’s still trying to groom us all into decent people – won’t work!) is the right thing to do.

  • Print Media, Video Stores Slipping Into Obsolescence

    Old guard media like newspapers and printed books have not sustained well into the digitized age of information. E-books are selling more than print books and newspapers can’t seem to find a way to keep from revenues from scraping the bottom of the well. Even the cozy neighborhood mainstay of movie rental stores are quickly disappearing from the street fronts (can you even remember the last time you visited a Blockbuster, if you can even find one these days?).

    These institutions may pluck a nostalgic chord in the minds of consumers and although emerging technology still hasn’t been able to duplicate certain aspects of print media (to this day, I cannot abide an e-reader due to the inability to leave marginalia as I read), pithy attachments don’t keep the coffers full. These media facets continue to try to find a way to survive yet it’s possible that it may be too late for any of them to avoiding a daisy-pushing future in the next twenty (or less!) years. To illustrate the dire straits of traditional media, the aptly titled website Totalbankruptcy.com put together the following inforgraphic. Given the steady decline evident from this graphic, the forecast appears to hold few if any sunny skies for traditional media outlets.

  • Twitter Or Facebook: Who Has Sexier (And More Sexed) Users?

    Your preferred social media site may indicate whether or not you got some sexy results for Valentine’s Day yesterday, according to a new survey from Euro RSCG. The poll, which the digital agency conducts every year, found that Twitter brings the people looking for exciting adventures in sex and romance; or, rather, those Indiana Joneses of promiscuity tend to gravitate towards Twitter more than Facebook. However you look at it, though, one thing’s certain: Twitter’s got more flesh than a Greek fest.

    Some random highlights:

  • 40% of daily Twitter users described themselves as “sexy,” whereas as only 28% of daily Facebook users said the same.
  • 21% of Twitterers “worry that their sexual fantasies and behaviors aren’t normal;” only 14% of Facebookers feel the same.
  • Tweeters have sex more often than Facebook users (55% vs. 46%)
  • More people on Twitter would choose sex over love.
  • Why Twitter has become a den of depravity is beyond me, but why ask why when you can do the do. Right? If you wanna see what Twitterers are saying about the big reveal that they’re a bunch of budding sex machines, follow the trend #DigitalLove to see what people are saying.

    Find more scintillating results from the survey below in the inforgraphic that Euro RSCG put together.

  • Sitting Down All Day Is Killing You

    Sitting Down All Day Is Killing You

    As I type this, I am seated in my comfy leather chair. I’m sure that many of you who are reading this are also situated in some kind of seat. How long have you been sitting there? When is the last time you got up and took a stroll around the office?

    It is a fact that many people’s jobs these days require them to spend a copious amount of time in front of a computer. Writers, Coders, Editors, Secretaries – the list goes on. According to reports that have been flooding in during the last year or so, the more hours you spend during the day sitting, the greater you risk of early death.

    First, Men’s Health reported on a study that concluded this fact. Then the New York times reported on another study that found that people had a greater risk of obesity, heart disease and type 2 diabetes when they sat an extra 6-8 hours a day.

    The posture of sitting itself probably isn’t worse than any other type of daytime physical inactivity, like lying on the couch watching “Wheel of Fortune.” But for most of us, when we’re awake and not moving, we’re sitting. This is your body on chairs: Electrical activity in the muscles drops — “the muscles go as silent as those of a dead horse,” Hamilton says — leading to a cascade of harmful metabolic effects. Your calorie-burning rate immediately plunges to about one per minute, a third of what it would be if you got up and walked. Insulin effectiveness drops within a single day, and the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes rises. So does the risk of being obese. The enzymes responsible for breaking down lipids and triglycerides — for “vacuuming up fat out of the bloodstream,” as Hamilton puts it — plunge, which in turn causes the levels of good (HDL) cholesterol to fall.

    So all this bad stuff over a lifetime adds up, according to researchers.

    Today comes this awesome new infographic courtesy of medicalbillingnacoding.org. Yes, the information provided is scary, especially for someone who likes to sit as much as I do. But the visuals are pretty top notch, especially the presentation of “sitting” as a jagged, hooded demon poised dramatically over the head of an unsuspecting office worker.

    Many propose stand up desks as a way to solve this problem. Others suggest frequent breaks from sitting on the job to perform various quick exercises. As someone with terrible knees, standing desks make me cringe. Maybe I’ll rethink the whole jumping jacks idea.

    Sitting is Killing You
    Via: Medical Billing And Coding